Sa'di (1184-1292):  
The Gulistan, c. 1256 CE
           
          
            
                       
          This translation of the Gulistan, from the Sacred Books of the East series,
                is by a different translator than the one which has been on the net for some time. This version was translated originally by James Ross, as The Gulistan of Sadi, London:
                  1890.  Unfortunately, the other etext does not identify the translator. 
           
            Chapter I 
              Of The Customs of Kings 
              I 
              I have heard of a king who made the sign to put a captive to death. The poor wretch, in
              that state of desperation, began to abuse the king in the dialect which he spoke, and to
              revile him with asperity, as has been said; whoever shall wash his hands of life will
              utter whatever he may harbor in his heart:  
                                           
              "When a man is desperate he will give a latitude to his tongue, Like as a cat
                at bay will fly at a dog"  
              ---- "at the moment of compulsion when it is impossible to fly, the hand will
              grasp the sharp edge of a sword." The king asked, saying, "What does he
              say?" One of the Viziers (or nobles in attendance), and a well-disposed man, made
              answer, "O my lord! he is expressing himself and saying, "Paradise is for
                such as are restraining their anger And forgiving their fellow-creatures; and God will
                befriend the benevolent."  
              The king felt compassion for him, and desisted from shedding his blood. Another
              nobleman, and the rival of that former, said, "It is indecorous for such peers, as we
              are, to use any language but that of truth in the presence of kings; this man abused his
              majesty, and spoke what was unworthy of him." The king turned away indignant at this
              remark, and replied, "I was better pleased with his falsehood than with this truth
              that you have told; for that bore the face of good policy, and this was founded in
              malignity; and the intelligent have said, 'A peace-mingling falsehood is preferable to a
              mischief stirring truth': Whatever prince may do that which he (his counselor) will
              recommend, it must be a subject of regret if he shall advise aught but good."  
              They had written over the portico of King Feridun's palace: "This world, O
              brother! abides with none. Set thy heart upon its maker, and let him suffice thee. Rest
              not thy pillow and support on a worldly domain which has fostered and slain many such as
              thou art. Since the precious soul must resolve on going, what matters it whether it
              departs from a throne or the ground?"  
              II 
              One of the kings of Khorassan saw, in a dream, Sultan Mahmud, the son of Saboktagin, a
              hundred years after his death, when his body was decayed and fallen into dust, all but his
              eyes, which as heretofore were moving in their sockets and looking about them. All the
              learned were at a stand for its interpretation, excepting one dervish, who made his
              obeisance, and said: "He is still looking about him, because his kingdom and wealth
              are possessed by others!---Many are the heroes whom they have buried under ground, of
              whose existence above it not one vestige is left; and of that old carcass which they
              committed to the earth, the earth has so consumed it that not one bone is left. Though
              many ages are gone since Nushirowan was in being, yet in the remembrance of his
              munificence is his fair renown left. Be generous, O my friend! and avail thyself of life,
              before they proclaim it as an event that such a person is not left."  
              III 
              I have heard of a king's son who was short and mean, and his other brothers were lofty
                in stature and handsome. On one occasion the king, his father, looked at him with
                disparagement and scorn. The son, in his sagacity, understood him and said, "O
                father! a short wise man is preferable to a tall blockhead; it is not everything that is
                mightier in stature that is superior in value: "A sheep's flesh is wholesome, that
                  of an elephant carrion. Of the mountains of this earth Sinai is one of the least, Yet is
                  it most mighty before God in state and dignity. Heard thou not what an intelligent
                lean man said one day to a sleek fat dolt? An Arab horse, notwithstanding his slim make,
                is more prized thus than a herd of asses."  
              The father smiled; the pillars of the State, or courtiers nodded their assent, and the
              other brothers were mortified to the quick. 'Till a man has declared his mind, his virtue
              and vice may have lain hidden; do not conclude that the thicket is unoccupied,
              peradventure the tiger is gone asleep!  
              I have heard that about that time a formidable antagonist appeared against the king.
              Now that an army was levied in each side, the first person that mounted his horse and
              sallied upon the plain was that son, and he exclaimed: "I can not be that man whose
              back thou mayest see on the day of battle, but am him thou mayest descry amidst the thick
              of it, with my head covered with dust and blood; for he that engages in the contest sports
              with his own blood, but he who flees from it sports with the blood of an army on the day
              of fight." He so spoke, assaulting the enemy's cavalry, and overthrew some renowned
              warriors. When he came before the king he kissed the earth of obeisance, and said, "O
              thou, who didst view my body with scorn, whilst not aware of valor's rough exterior, it is
              the lean steed that will prove of service, and not the fatted ox, on the day of
              battle."  
              They have reported that the enemy's cavalry was immense, and those of the king few in
              number; a body of them was inclined to fly, when the youth called aloud, and said,
              "Be resolute, my brave men, that you may not have to wear the apparel of women!"
              The troops were more courageous on this speech, and attacked altogether. I have heard that
              on that day they obtained a complete victory over the enemy. The king kissed his face and
              eyes, and folded him in his arms, and became daily more attached to him, 'till he declared
              him heir-apparent to the throne. The brothers bore him a grudge, and put poison into his
              food. His sister saw this from a window, and closed the shutter; and the boy understood
              the sign, and withdrew his hand from the dish, and said, "It is hard that the
              virtuous should perish and that the vicious should occupy their places." Were the
              homayi, or phoenix, to be extinct in the world, none would take refuge under the shadow of
              an owl. They informed the father of this event; he sent for the brothers and rebuked them,
              as they deserved. Then he made a division of his domains, and gave a suitable portion to
              each, that discontent might cease; but the ferment was increased, as they have said: Ten
              dervishes can sleep on one rug, but two kings can not be accommodated in a whole kingdom.
              When a man after God's heart can eat the moiety of his loaf, the other moiety he will give
              in alms to the poor. A king may acquire the sovereignty of one climate or empire; and he
              will in like manner covet the possession of another.  
              IV 
              A horde of Arab robbers had possessed themselves of the fastness of a mountain, and
              waylaid the track of the caravan. The yeomanry of the villages were frightened at their
              stratagems, and the king's troops alarmed, inasmuch as they had secured an impregnable
              fortress on the summit of the mountain, and made this stronghold their retreat and
              dwelling.  
              The superintendents of the adjacent districts consulted together about obviating their
              mischief, saying: If they are in this way left to improve their fortune, any opposition to
              them may prove impracticable. The tree that has just taken root, the strength of one man
              may be able to extract; but leave it to remain thus for a time, and the machinery of a
              purchase may fail to eradicate it: the leak at the dam head might have been stopped with a
              plug, which now it has a vent we can not ford its current on an elephant.  
              Finally it was determined that they should set a spy over them, and watch an
              opportunity when they had made a sally upon another tribe, and left their citadel
              unguarded. Some companies of able warriors and experienced troops were sent, that they
              might conceal themselves in the recesses of the mountain. At night, when the robbers were
              returned, jaded with their march and laden with spoil, and had stripped themselves of
              their armor, and deposited their plunder, the foremost enemy they had to encounter was
              sleep. Now that the first watch of night was gone: "the disk of the sun was withdrawn
              into a shade, and Jonas had stepped into the fish's mouth"---the bold-hearted
              warriors sprang from their ambush and secured the robbers by pinioning them one after
              another.  
              In the morning they presented them at the royal tribunal, and the king gave an order to
              put the whole to death. There happened to be among them a stripling, the fruit of whose
              early spring was ripening in its bloom, and the flower-garden of his cheek shooting into
              blossom. One of the viziers kissed the foot of the imperial throne, and laid the face of
              intercession on the ground, and said, "This boy has not yet tasted the fruit of the
              garden of life, nor enjoyed the fragrance of the flowers of youth: such is my confidence
              in the generous disposition of his Majesty that it will favor a devoted servant by sparing
              his blood." The king turned his face away from this speech; as it did not accord with
              his lofty way of thinking, he replied: "The rays of the virtuous can not illuminate
              such as are radically vicious; to give education to the worthless is like throwing walnuts
              upon a dome: it were wiser to eradicate the tree of their wickedness, and annihilate their
              tribe; for to put out a fire and leave the embers, and to kill a viper and foster its
              young, would not be the acts of rational beings. Though the clouds pour down the water of
              vegetation, thou canst never gather fruit from a willow twig. Exalt not the fortune of the
              abject, for thou canst never extract sugar from a mat or common cane."  
              The vizier listened to this speech; willingly or not he approved of it, and applauded
                the good sense of the king, and said: "What his majesty, whose dominion is eternal,
                is pleased to remark is the mirror of probity and essence of good policy, for had he been
                brought up in the society of those vagabonds, and confined to their service, he would have
                followed their vicious courses. Your servant, however, trusts that he may be instructed to
                associate with the virtuous, and take to the habits of the prudent; for he is still a
                child, and the lawless and refractory principles of that gang can not have yet tainted his
                mind; and it is in tradition that----Whatever child is born, he is verily born after
                  the right way, namely Islam, Afterward his father and his mother bring him up as a Jew,
                  Christian, or Magi.  
              The wife of Lot associated with the wicked, and her posterity failed in the gift of
                prophecy; the dog of the seven sleepers (at Ephesus) for some time took the path of the
                righteous, and became a rational being."  
              He said this, and a body of the courtiers joined him in intercession, 'till the king
              acceded to the youth's pardon, and answered: "I gave him up, though I saw not the
              good of it. Know thou what Zal said to the heroic Rustem: 'Thou must not consider thy foe
              as abject and helpless. I have often found a small stream at the fountain-head, which,
              when followed up, carried away the camel and its load.'"  
              In short, the vizier took the boy home, and educated him with kindness and liberality.
              And he appointed him masters and tutors, who taught him the graces of logic and rhetoric,
              and all manner of courtier accomplishments, so that he met general approbation. On one
              occasion the vizier was detailing some instances of his proficiency and talents in the
              royal presence, and saying: "The instruction of the wise has made an impression upon
              him, and his former savageness is obliterated from his mind." The king smiled at this
              speech, and replied: "The whelp of a wolf must prove a wolf at last, notwithstanding
              he may be brought up by a man."  
              Two years after this a gang of city vagabonds got about him, and joined in league,
              'till on an opportunity he murdered the vizier and his two sons; and, carrying off an
              immense booty, he took up the station of his father in the den of thieves, and became a
              hardened villain. The king was apprised of this event; and, seizing the hand of amazement
              with the teeth of regret, said: "How can any person manufacture a tempered saber from
              base iron; nor can a base-born man, O wiseacre, be made a gentleman by any education!
              Rain, in the purity of whose nature there is no anomaly, cherishes the tulip in the garden
              and common weed in the salt-marsh. Waste not thy labor in scattered seed upon a briny
              soil, for it can never be made to yield spikenard; to confer a favor on the wicked is of a
              like import, as if thou didst an injury to the good."  
              V 
              At the gate of Oghlamish Patan, King of Delhi, I (namely Sadi) saw an officer's son,
              who, in his wit and learning, wisdom and understanding, surpassed all manner of encomium.
              In the prime of youth, he at the same time bore on his forehead the traces of ripe age,
              and exhibited on his cheek the features of good fortune: "Above his head, from his
              prudent conduct, the star of superiority shone conspicuous."  
              In short, it was noticed with approbation by the king that he possessed bodily
              accomplishments and mental endowments. And sages have remarked that worth rests not on
              riches, but on talents; and the discretion of age, not in years, but on good sense. His
              comrades envied his good fortune, charged him with disaffection, and vainly attempted to
              have him put to death: "but what can the rival effect so long as the charmer is our
              friend?"  
              The king asked, saying, "Why do they show such a disinclination to do you
              justice?" He replied: "Under the shadow of his majesty's good fortune I have
              pleased everybody, excepting the envious man, who is not to be satisfied but with a
              decline of my success; and let the prosperity and dominion of my lord the king be
              perpetual!" I can so manage as to give umbrage to no man's heart; but what can I do
              with the envious man, who harbors within himself the cause of his own chagrin? Die, O ye
              envious, that ye may get a deliverance; for this is such an evil that you can get rid of
              it only by death. Men soured by misfortune anxiously desire that the state and fortune of
              the prosperous may decline; if the eye of the bat is not suited for seeing by day, how can
              the fountain of the sun be to blame? Dost thou require the truth? It were better a
              thousand such eyes should suffer, rather than that the light of the sun were obscured.  
              VI 
              They tell a story of a Persian king who had stretched forth the arm of oppression over
              the subjects' property, and commenced a system of violence and rapacity to such a degree
              that the people emigrated to avoid the vexatiousness of his tyranny, and took the road of
              exile to escape the annoyance of his extortions. Now that the population was diminished
              and the resources of the State had failed, the treasury remained empty, and enemies
              gathered strength on all sides. Whoever may expect a comforter on the day of adversity,
              say, let him practice humanity during the season of prosperity; if not treated cordially,
              thy devoted slave will forsake thee; show him kindness and affection, and the stranger may
              become the slave of thy devotion.  
              One day they were reading, in his presence, from the Shah-Nameh, of the tyrant Zollak's
              declining dominion and the success of Feridun. The vizier asked the king, saying:
              "Can you so far comprehend that Feridun had no revenue, domain, or army, and how the
              kingdom came to be confirmed with him?" He answered: "As you have heard, a body
              of people collected about him from attachment, and gave their assistance 'till he acquired
              a kingdom." The vizier said: "Since, O sire, a gathering of the people is the
              means of forming a kingdom, how come you in fact to cause their dispersion unless it be
              that you covet not a sovereignty? So far were good that thou wouldst patronize the army
              with all thy heart, for a king with an army constitutes a principality." The king
              asked: "What are the best means of collecting an army and yeomanry?" He replied:
              "Munificence is the duty of a king, that the people may assemble around him, and
              clemency, that they may rest secure under the asylum of his dominion and fortune, neither
              of which you have. A tyrant can not govern a kingdom, for the duty  
              of a shepherd is not expected from the wolf. A king that can anyhow be accessory to
                tyranny will undermine the wall of his own sovereignty."  
              The advice of the prudent minister did not accord with the disposition of the king. He
              ordered him to be confined, and immured him in a dungeon. It soon came to pass that the
              sons of the king's uncle rose in opposition, levied an army in support of their
              pretensions, and claimed the sovereignty of their father. A host of the people who had
              cruelly suffered under the arm of his extortion and were dispersed, gathered around and
              succored them 'till they dispossessed him of his kingdom and established them in his
              stead. That king who can approve of tyrannizing over the weak will find his friend a
              bitter foe in the day of hardship. Deal fairly with thy subjects, and rest easy about the
              warfare of thine enemies, for with an upright prince his yeomanry is an army.  
              IX 
              In his old age an Arab king was grievously sick, and had no hopes of recovery, when lo!
              a messenger on horseback presented himself at the palace-gate, and joyfully announced,
              saying: "Under his majesty's good fortune we have taken such a stronghold, made the
              enemy prisoners of war, and reduced all the landholders and vassals of that quarter to
              obedience as subjects." On hearing this news the king fetched a cold sigh, and
              answered: "These glad tidings are not intended for me but for my rivals, namely, the
              heirs of the sovereignty. My precious life has, alas! been wasted in the hope that what my
              heart chiefly coveted might enter at my gate. My bounden hope was gratified; yet what do I
              benefit by that? There is no hope that my passed life can return. The hand of death beats
              the drum of departure. Yes, my two eyes, you must bid adieu to my head. Yes, palm of my
              hand, wrist, and arm, all of you say farewell, and each take leave of the other. Death has
              overtaken me to the gratification of my foes; and you, O my friends, must at last be
              going. My days were blazed away in folly; what I did not do let you take warning and
              do." 
              X 
              At the metropolitan mosque of Damascus I was one year fervent in prayer over the tomb
              of Yahiya, or John the Baptist and prophet, on whom be God's blessing, when one of the
              Arab princes, who was notorious for his injustice, chanced to arrive on a pilgrimage, and
              he put up his supplication, asked a benediction, and craved his wants.---The rich and poor
              are equally the devoted slaves of this shrine, and the richer they are the more they stand
              in need of succor. Then he spoke to me, saying: "In conformity with the generous
              resolution of dervishes and their sincere zeal, you will, I trust, unite with me in
              prayer, for I have much to fear from a powerful enemy." I answered him, "Have
              compassion on your own weak subjects, that you may not see disquiet from a strong foe.
              With a mighty arm and heavy hand it is dastardly to wrench the wrists of poor and
              helpless. Is he not afraid who is hard-hearted with the fallen that if he slip his foot
              nobody will take him by the hand?--- Whoever sowed the seed of vice and expected a
              virtuous produce, pampered a vain brain and encouraged an idle whim. Take the cotton from
              thy ear and do mankind justice, for if thou refuse them justice there is a day of
              retribution. The sons of Adam are members one of another, for in their creation they have
              a common origin. If the vicissitudes of fortune involve one member in pain, all the other
              members will feel a sympathy. Thou, who art indifferent to other men's affliction, if they
              call thee a man art unworthy of the name."  
              XI 
              A dervish, whose prayers had a ready acceptance with God, made his appearance at
              Baghdad. Hojaj Yusuf (a great tyrant) sent for him and said: "Put up a good prayer
              for me." He prayed, "O God! take from him his life!" Hojaj said, "For
              God's sake, what manner of prayer is this?" He answered: "It is a salutary
              prayer for you, and for the whole sect of Muslims.---O mighty sir, thou oppressor of the
              feeble, how long can this violence remain marketable? For what purpose came the
              sovereignty to thee? Thy death were preferable to thy tyrannizing over mankind."  
              XII 
              An unjust king asked a holy man, saying. "What is more excellent than
              prayers?" He answered: "For you to remain asleep 'till mid-day, that for this
              one interval you might not afflict mankind."---I saw a tyrant lying dormant at noon,
              and said, "This is mischief, and is best lulled to sleep. It were better that such a
              reprobate were dead whose state of sleep is preferable to his being awake."  
              XIV 
              One of the ancient kings was easy with the yeomanry in collecting his revenue, but hard
              on the soldiery in his issue of pay; and when a formidable enemy showed its face, these
              all turned their backs. Whenever the king is remiss in paying his troops, the troops will
              relax in handling their arms. What bravery can be displayed in the ranks of battle whose
              hand is destitute of the means of living?  
              One of those who had excused themselves was in some sort my intimate. I reproached him
              and said, "He is base and ungrateful, mean and disreputable who, on a trifling change
              of circumstances, can desert his old master and forget his obligation of many years'
              employment." He replied: "Were I to speak out, I swear by generosity you would
              excuse me. Peradventure, my horse was without corn, and the housings of his saddle in
              pawn.---And the prince who, through parsimony, withholds his army's pay can not expect it
              to enter heartily upon his service."---Give money to the gallant soldier that he may
              be zealous in thy cause, for if he is stinted of his due he will go abroad for service. So
                long as a warrior is replenished with food he will fight valiantly, And when his belly is
                empty he will run away sturdily. 
              XV 
              One of the viziers was displaced, and withdrew into a fraternity of dervishes, whose
              blessed society made its impression upon him and afforded consolation to his mind. The
              king was again favorably disposed toward him, and offered his reinstatement in office; but
              he consented not, and said, "With the wise it is deemed preferable to be out of
              office than to remain in place.---Such as sat within the cell of retirement blunted the
              teeth of dogs, and shut the mouths of mankind; they destroyed their writings, and broke
              their writing reeds, and escaped the lash and venom of the critics."---The king
              answered: "At all events I require a prudent and able man, who is capable of managing
              the State affairs of my kingdom." The ex-minister said: "The criterion, O sire,
              of a wise and competent man is that he will not meddle with such like matters.---The homayi,
              or phoenix, is honored above all other birds because it feeds on bones, and injures no
              living creature."  
              A Tamsil, or application in point.---They asked a Siyah-gosh, or lion-provider,
              "Why do you choose the service of the lion?" He answered: "Because I
              subsist on the leavings of his prey, and am secure from the ill-will of my enemies under
              the asylum of his valor." They said: "Now you have got within the shadow of his
              protection and admit a grateful sense of his bounty, why do you not approach more closely,
              that he may include you within the circle of select courtiers and number you among his
              chosen servants?" He replied, "I should not thus be safe from his
              violence."---Though a Gueber may keep his fire alight for a hundred years, if he fall
              once within its flame it will burn him.---It on one occasion may chance that the courtier
              of the king's presence shall pick up a purse of gold, and the next that he shall lie
              shorter by the head. And philosophers have remarked, saying, "It is incumbent on us
              to be constantly aware of the fickle dispositions of kings, who will one moment take
              offense at a salutation, and at another make an honorary dress the return for an act of
              rudeness; and they have said, That to be over much facetious is the accomplishment of
                courtiers and blemish of the wise.---Be wary, and preserve the state of thine own
              character, and leave sport and buffoonery to jesters and courtiers.  
              XVI 
              One of my associates brought me a complaint of his perverse fortune, saying, "I
              have small means and a large family, and can not bear up with my load of poverty. Often
              has a thought crossed my mind, suggesting, Let me remove into another country, that in
                whatever way I can manage a livelihood none may be informed of my good or bad luck."
              ---(Often he went asleep hungry, and nobody was aware, saying, "Who is he?"
              Often did his life hang upon his lip, and none lamented over him.)--- "On the other
              hand, I reflect on the exultation of my rivals, saying, They will scoffingly sneer
                behind my back, and impute my zeal in behalf of my family to a want of humanity.---Do
              but behold that graceless vagabond who can never witness the face of good fortune. Be will
              consult the ease of his own person and abandon to distress his wife and children.---And,
              as is known, I have some small skill in the science of accounts. If, through your
              respected interest, any office can be obtained that may be the means of quieting my mind,
              I shall not, during the remainder of life, be able to express my sense of its
              gratitude."  
              I replied, "O brother, the service of kings offers a twofold prospect---a hope of
                maintenance and a fear for existence; and it accords not with the counsel of the wise,
                under that expectation, to incur this risk.---No tax-gatherer will enter the dervish's
                abode, saying, Pay me the rent of a field and orchard; either put up with trouble and
                  chagrin, or give thy heartstrings to the crows to pluck."  
              He said, "This speech is not made as applicable to my case, nor have you given me
              a categorical answer. Have you not heard what has been remarked, 'His hand will tremble on
              rendering his account who has been accessory to a dishonest act.---Righteousness will
              insure the divine favor; I never met him going astray who took the righteous path.'---And
              philosophers have said, 'Four orders of people are mortally afraid of four others---the
              revenue embezzler, of the king; the thief, of the watchman; the fornicator, of the
              eavesdropper; and the adulteress, of the censor.' But what has he to fear from the
              comptroller who has a fair set of account books?--- 'Be not extravagant and corrupt while
              in office if thou wish that the malice of thy rival may be circumscribed on settling thy
              accounts. Be undefiled, O brother, in thy integrity, and fear nobody; washer men will beat
              only dirty clothes against a stone.'"  
              I replied, "The story of that fox suits your case, which they saw running away,
              stumbling and getting up. Somebody asked him, 'What calamity has happened to put you in
              such a state of trepidation?' He said, 'I have heard that they are putting a camel in
              requisition.' The other answered, 'O silly animal! what connection has a camel with you,
              or what resemblance is there between you and it?' He said, 'Be silent; for were the
              envious from malevolence to insist that this is a camel, and I should be seized for one,
              who would be so solicitous about me as to inquire into my case?' And before they can bring
              the antidote from Iraq the person bitten by the snake may be dead. In like manner, you
              possess knowledge and integrity, discrimination and probity, yet spies lie in ambush, and
              informers lurk in corners, who, notwithstanding your moral rectitude, will note down the
              opposite; and should you anyhow stand arraigned before the king, and occupy the place of
              his reprehension, who in that State would step forward in your defense? Accordingly, I
              would advise that you should secure the kingdom of contentment, and give up all thoughts
              of preferment. As the wise have said: "The benefits of a sea voyage are innumerable;
              but if thou seek for safety, it is to be found only on shore.'"  
              My friend listened to this speech; he got into a passion, caviled at my fable, and
              began to question it with warmth and asperity, saying, "What wisdom or propriety,
              good sense or morality, is there in this? Here is verified that maxim of the sage, which
              tells us they are friends alone that can serve us in a jail, for all our enemies may
              pretend friendship at our own table.--- 'Esteem him not a friend who during thy prosperity
              will brag of his love and brotherly affection.' I account him a friend who will take his
              friend by the hand when struggling with despair, and overwhelmed with misfortune."  
              I perceived within myself, saying, "He is disturbed, and listens to my advice with
              impatience"; and, having called the sahib diwan, or lord high treasurer, in
              virtue of a former intimacy that subsisted between us, I stated his case and spoke so
              fully upon his skill and merits, that he put him in nomination for a training office.
              After some time, having adverted to his kindly disposition and approved of his good
              management, his promotion was in train, and he got confirmed in a much higher station.
              Thus was the star of his good fortune in ascension, 'till it rose into the zenith of
              ambition; and he became the favorite of his majesty the king, toward whom all turned for
              counsel, and upon whom all eyes rested their hopes! I rejoiced at this prosperous change
              of his affairs, and said: "Repine not at thy bankrupt circumstances, nor let thy
              heart despond, for the fountain of immortality has its source of chaos. "Take heed, O
              brother in affliction! and be not disheartened, For God has in store many hidden mercies.
              Sit not down soured at the revolutions of the times, for patience is bitter, yet it will
              yield sweet fruit." 
              At that juncture I happened to accompany a party of friends on a journey to Hijaz, or
              Arabia Petraea. On my return from the pilgrimage to Mecca, he came out two stages to meet
              me. I perceived that his outward plight was wretched, and his garb that of dervishes. I
              asked, "How is this?" He replied, "Just as you said, a faction bore me a
              grudge and charged me with malpractice; and the king, be his reign eternal, would not
              investigate the truth of that charge, and my old and best friends stood aloof from my
              defense, and overlooked my claims on our former acquaintance.---When, through an act of
              God, a man has fallen, the whole world will put their feet upon his neck; when they see
              that fortune has taken him by the hand, they will put their hands upon their breasts, and
              be loud in his praise.---In short, I underwent all manner of persecution 'till within this
              week, that the tidings of the safe return of the pilgrims reached us, when I got a release
              from my heavy durance and a confiscation of my hereditary tenements." I said,
              "At that time you did not listen to my admonition, when I warned you that the service
              of princes is, like a voyage at sea, profitable but hazardous: you either get a treasure
              or perish miserably.---The merchant gains the shore with gold in both his hands, or a wave
              will one day leave him dead on its beach."---Not deeming it generous any further to
              irritate a poor man's wound with the asperity of reproach, or to sprinkle his sore with
              the salt of harsh words, I made a summary conclusion in these two verses, and said:---
              "Wert thou not aware that thou shouldst find fetters on thy feet when thou wouldst
              not listen to the generous man's counsel? Thrust not again thy finger into a scorpion's
              hole till thou canst endure the pain of its sting."  
              XVI 
              I was the companion of a holy fraternity, whose manners were correct from piety, and
              minds disciplined from probity. An eminent prince entertained a high and respectful
              opinion of the worth of this brotherhood, and had assigned it an endowment. Perhaps one of
              them committed an act unworthy of the character of dervishes; for the good opinion of that
              personage was forfeited, and the market of their support shut. I wished that I could by
              any means re-establish the maintenance of my friends, and attempted to wait on the great
              man; but his porter opposed my entrance, and turned me away with rudeness. I excused him
              conformably with what the witty have said: "Till thou canst take an introduction
              along with thee approach not the gate of a prince, vizier, or lord; for the dog and the
              doorkeeper, on espying a beggar, will the one seize his skirt and the other his
              collar."  
              When the favorite attendants of that great man were aware of my situation, they ushered
              me into his presence with respect, and offered me the highest seat; but in humility I took
              the lowest, and said: "Permit that I, the slave of the abject, should seat myself on
              a level with servants."---The great man answered, "My God, my God! what room is
              there for this speech? Wert thou to seat thyself upon the pupil of mine eye, I would court
              thy dalliance, for thou art lovely."  
              In short, I took my seat, and entered upon a variety of topics, 'till the indiscretion
              of my friends was brought upon the carpet, when I said: "What fault did the lord of
              past munificence remark, that his servant should seem so contemptible in his sight?
              Individually with God is the perfection of majesty and goodness, who can discern our
              failings and continue to us his support." When the prince heard this sentiment he
              subscribed to its omnipotence; and, with regard to the stipendiary allowance of my
              friends, he ordered its continuance as heretofore, and a faithful discharge of all
              arrears. I thanked him for his generosity, kissed the dust of obeisance, apologized for my
              boldness, and at the moment of taking my leave, added: "When the fane of the Kaaba,
              at Mecca, became their object from a far distant land, pilgrims would hurry on to visit it
              for many farsangs. It behooves thee to put up with such as we are, for nobody will throw a
              stone at a tree that bears no fruit."  
              XVIII 
              A prince inherited immense riches by succeeding to his father. He opened the hand of
              liberality, displayed his munificence, and bestowed innumerable gifts upon his troops and
              people. "The brain will not be perfumed by a censer of green aloes-wood; place it
              over the fire that it may diffuse fragrance like ambergris. If ambitious of a great name,
              make a practice of munificence, for the crop will not shoot till thou shalt sow the
              seed."  
              A narrow-minded courtier began to admonish him, saying, "Verily, former sovereigns
              have collected this wealth with scrupulosity and stored it advisedly. Check your hand in
              this waste, for accidents wait ahead, and foes lurk behind. God forbid that you should
              want it on a day of need.-Wert thou to distribute the contents of a granary among the
              people, every master of a family might receive a grain of rice; why not exact a grain of
              silver from each, that thou mightest daily hoard a chamber full of treasure?"  
              The prince turned his face aside from this speech, so contrary to his own lofty
              sentiments, and harshly reprimanded him, saying, "A great and glorious God made me
              sovereign of this property, that I might enjoy and spend it; and posted me not a sentinel,
              to hoard and watch over it.---Carown perished, who possessed forty magazines of treasure;
              Nushirowan died not, who left behind him a fair reputation."  
              XIX 
              They have related that at a hunting-seat they were roasting some game for Nushirowan,
              and as there was no salt they were dispatching a servant to the village to fetch some.
              Nushirowan called to him, saying, "Take it at its fair price, and not by force, lest
              a bad precedent be established and the village desolated." They asked, "What
              damage can ensue from this trifle?" He answered, "Originally, the basis of
              oppression in this world was small, and every newcomer added to it, 'till it reached to
              its present extent.--Let the monarch eat but one apple from a peasant's orchard, and his
              guards, or slaves, will pull up the tree by its root. From the plunder of five eggs, that
              the king shall sanction, his troops will stick a thousand fowls on their spits."  
              XX 
              I have heard of a revenue-collector who would distrain the huts of the peasantry, that
              he might enrich the treasury of the sovereign, regardless of that maxim of the wise, who
              have said, "Whoever can offend the Most High, that he may gain the heart of a
              fellow-creature, God on high will instigate that creature against him, 'till he dig out
              the foundation of his fortune.---That crackling in the fame is not caused by burning rue,
              but it is the sigh of the afflicted that occasions it."  
              They say, of all animals the lion is the chief; and of beasts the ass is the meanest;
              yet, with the concurrence of the wise, the burden-bearing ass is preferable to the
              man-devouring lion. "The poor ass, though devoid of understanding, will be held
              precious when carrying a burden; oxen and asses that carry loads are preferable to men
              that injure their fellow creatures."  
              The king had reported to him a part of his nefarious conduct. He put him to the rack,
              and tortured him to death. "Thou canst not obtain the sovereign's approbation 'till
              thou make sure of the good-will of his people. Wish thou that God shall be bountiful to
              thee, be thou good thyself to the creatures of God."  
              One who had suffered from his oppression passed him at the time of his execution, and
              said: "It is not every man that may have the strong arm of high station, that can in
              his government take an immoderate freedom with the subjects' property. It is possible to
              cram a bone down the throat, but when it sticks at the navel it will burst open the
              belly."  
              XXI 
              They tell a story of an evil-disposed person who struck a pious good man on the head
              with a stone. Having no power of revenge, the dervish was keeping the stone by him 'till
              an occasion when the sovereign let loose the army of his wrath, and cast him into a
              dungeon. The poor man went up and flung the stone at his head. The person spoke to him,
              saying, "Who are you, and why did you throw this stone at my head?" He answered,
              "I am that poor man, and this is the same stone that you on a certain occasion flung
              at my head." He said, "Where have you been all this time?" The poor man
              answered, "I stood in awe of your high station, but now that I find you in a dungeon,
              I avail myself of the opportunity, as they have said--- 'Whilst they saw the worthless man
              in prosperity, the wise thought proper to show him respect. Now thou hast not sharp and
              tearing nails, it is prudent for thee to defer to engage with the wicked. Whoever grappled
              with a steel-armed wrist exposed his own silver arm to torture. Wait 'till fortune can
              manacle his hands, then beat out his brains to the satisfaction of thy friends.'"  
              XXV 
              I have heard that one of the kings of Arabia directed the officers of his treasury,
              saying, "You will double a certain person's salary, whatever it may be, for he is
              constant in attendance and ready for orders, while the other courtiers are diverted by
              play, and negligent of their duty." A good and holy man overheard this, and heaved a
              sigh and groan from the bottom of his bosom. They asked, saying, "What vision did you
              see?" He replied, "The exalted mansions of his devoted servants will be after
              this manner portioned out at the judgment-seat of a Most High and Mighty Deity!---If for
              two mornings a person is assiduous about the person of the king, on the third he will in
              some shape regard him with affection. The sincerely devout exist in the hope that they
              shall not depart disappointed from God's threshold. The rank of a prince is the reward of
              obedience. Disobedience to command is a proof of rejection. Whoever has the aspect of the
              upright and good will lay the face of duty at this threshold."  
              XXVI 
              They tell a story of a tyrant who bought firewood from the poor at a low price, and
              sold it to the rich at an advance. A good and holy man went up to him and said, "Thou
              art a snake, who bites everybody thou sees; or an owl, who digs up and makest a ruin of
              the place where thou sits. Although thy injustice may pass unpunished among us, it can not
              escape God, the knower of secrets. Be not unjust with the people of this earth, that their
              complaints may not rise up to heaven." They say the unjust man was offended at his
              words, turned aside his face, and showed him no civility, as they have expressed it (in
              the Qur'an): He, the glorified God, overtook him amidst his sins: 'till one night,
              when the fire of his kitchen fell upon the stack of wood, consumed all his property, and
              laid him from the bed of voluptuousness upon the ashes of hell torments. That good and
              holy man happened to be passing and observed that he was remarking to his friends, "I
              can not fancy whence this fire fell upon my dwelling." He said, "From the smoke
              of the hearts of the poor!---Guard against the smoke of the sore-afflicted heart, for an
              inside sore will at last gather into a head. Give nobody's heart pain so long as thou
              canst avoid it, for one sigh may set a whole world into a flame."  
              They have related that these verses were inscribed in golden letters upon Kai-khosrau's
              crown: "How many years, and what a continuance of ages, that mankind shall on this
              earth walk over my head. As the kingdom came to me from hand to hand, so it shall pass
              into the hands of others."  
              XXVII 
              A person had become a master in the art of wrestling; he knew three hundred and sixty
              sleights in this art, and could exhibit a fresh trick for every day throughout the year.
              Perhaps owing to a liking that a corner of his heart took for the handsome person of one
              of his scholars, he taught him three hundred and fifty-nine of those feats, but he was
              putting off the instruction of one, and under some pretense deferring it. In short the
              youth became such a proficient in the art and talent of wrestling that none of his
              contemporaries had ability to cope with him, 'till he at length had one day boasted before
              the reigning sovereign, saying, "To any superiority my master possesses over me, he
              is beholden to my reverence of his seniority, and in virtue of his tutorage; otherwise I
              am not inferior in power, and am his equal in skill." This want of respect displeased
              the king. He ordered a wrestling match to be held, and a spacious field to be fenced in
              for the occasion. The ministers of State, nobles of the court, and gallant men of the
              realm were assembled, and the ceremonials of the court marshaled. Like a huge and lusty
              elephant, the youth rushed into the ring with such a crash that had a brazen mountain
              opposed him he would have moved it from its base. The master being aware that the youth
              was his superior in strength, engaged him in that strange feat of which he had kept him
              ignorant. The youth was unacquainted with its guard. Advancing, nevertheless, the master
              seized him with both hands, and lifting him bodily from the ground, raised him above his
              head and flung him on the earth. The crowd set up a shout. The king ordered them to give
              the master an honorary dress and handsome largess, and the youth he addressed with
              reproach and asperity, saying, " You played the traitor with your own patron, and
              failed in your presumption of opposing him." He replied, " O sire! my master did
              not overcome me by strength and ability, but one cunning trick in the art of wrestling was
              left which he was reserved in teaching me, and by that little feat had to-day the upper
              hand of me." The master said, " I reserved myself for such a day as this. As the
              wise have told us, Put it not so much into a friend's power that, if hostilely disposed,
              he can do you an injury.' Have you not heard what that man said who was treacherously
              dealt with by his own pupil: ' Either in fact there was no good faith in this world, or
              nobody has perhaps practiced it in our days. No person learned the art of archery from me
              who did not in the end make me his butt.'?"  
              XXVIII 
              A solitary dervish had taken up his station at the corner of a desert. A king was
              passing by him. Inasmuch as contentment is the enjoyment of a kingdom, the dervish did not
              raise his head, nor show him the least mark of attention and, inasmuch as sovereignty is
              regal pomp, the king took offense, and said : "The tribe of ragged mendicants
              resemble brute beasts, and have neither grace nor good manners." The vizier stepped
              up to him, and said: "O generous man! the sovereign of the universe has passed by
              you; why did you not do him homage, and discharge the duty of obeisance?" He answered
              and said, " Speak to your sovereign, saying: Expect service from that person who will
              court your favor; let him moreover know that kings are meant for the protection of the
              people, and not the people for the subjects of kings. ---Though it be for their benefit
              that his glory is exalted, yet is the king but the shepherd of the poor. The sheep are not
              intended for the service of the shepherd, but the shepherd is appointed to tend the sheep.
              ---Today thou mayest observe one man proud from prosperity, another with a heart sore from
              adversity; have patience for a few days 'till the dust of the grave can consume the brain
              of that vain and foolish head. When the record of destiny came to take effect, the
              distinction of liege and subject disappeared. Were a person to turn up the dust of the
              defunct, he could not distinguish that of the rich man from the poor."  
              These sayings made a strong impression upon the king; he said: "Ask me for
              something." He replied: "What I desire is, that you will not trouble me
              again!" The king said, "Favor me with a piece of advice." He answered:
              "Attend to them now that the good things of this life are in thy hands; for wealth
              and dominion are passing from one hand into another."  
              XXX 
              A king ordered an innocent person to be put to death. The man said, "Seek not your
              own hurt by venting any anger you may entertain against me." The king asked,
              "How?" He replied, "The pain of this punishment will continue with me for a
              moment, but the sin of it will endure with you forever.--The period of this life passes by
              like the wind of the desert. Joy and sorrow, beauty and deformity, equally pass away. The
              tyrant vainly thought that he did me an injury, but round his neck it clung and passed
              over me." The king profited by this advice, spared his life, and asked his
              forgiveness.  
              XXXI 
              The cabinet ministers of Nushirowan were debating an important affair of State, and
              each delivered his opinion according to the best of his judgment. In like manner the king
              also delivered his sentiments, and Abu-zarchamahr, the prime minister, accorded in opinion
              with him. The other ministers whispered to him, saying, "What did you see superior in
              the king's opinion that you preferred it to the judgment of so many wise heads?" He
              replied: "Because the event is doubtful, and the opinion of all rests in the pleasure
              of the most high God whether it shall be right or wrong. Accordingly it is safer to
              conform with the judgment of the king, because if that shall prove wrong, our
              obsequiousness to his will shall secure us from his displeasure. ---To sport an opinion
              contrary to the judgment of the king were to wash our hands in our own blood. Were he
              verily to say this day is night, it would behoove us to reply: Lo! there are the moon and
              seven stars."  
              XXXII 
              An impostor plaited his hair and spoke, saying, "I am a descendant of Ali";
              and he entered the city along with the caravan from Hijaz, saying, "I come a pilgrim
              from Mecca"; and he presented a Casidah or elegy to the king, saying, " I have
              composed it!" The king gave him money, treated him with respect, and ordered him to
              be shown much flattering attention; 'till one of the courtiers, who had that day returned
              from a voyage at sea, said, "I saw him on the Eeduzha, or anniversary of sacrifice at
              Busrah; how then can he be a Hadji, or pilgrim?" Another said, "Now I recollect
              him, his father was a Christian at Malatiyah (Malta); how then can he be a descendant of
              Ali?" And they discovered his verses in the divan of Anwari. The king ordered that
              they should beat and drive him away, saying, "How came you to utter so many
              falsehoods?" He replied, "O sovereign of the universe! I will utter one speech
              more, and if that may not prove true, I shall deserve whatever punishment you may
              command." The king asked, " What may that be?" He said: " If a peasant
              bring thee a cup of junket, two measures of it will be water and one spoonful of it
              buttermilk. If thy slave spoke idly be not offended, for great travelers deal mostly in
              the marvelous!" The king smiled and replied, "You never in your life spoke a
              truer word." He directed them to gratify his expectations, and he departed happy and
              content.  
              XXXIII 
              They have related that one of the viziers would compassionate the weak and meditate the
              good of everybody. He happened to fall under the royal displeasure, and they all strove to
              obtain his release. Such as had him in custody were indulgent in their restraint, and his
              fellow-grandees were loud in proclaiming his virtues, 'till the king pardoned his fault. A
              good and holy man was apprised of these events, and said: "In order to conciliate the
              good-will of friends, it were better to sell our patrimonial garden; in order to boil the
              pot of well-wishers, it were good to convert our household furniture into firewood. Do
              good even to the wicked; it is as well to shut a dog's mouth with a crumb."  
              XXXIV 
              One of Haroun-al-Rashid's children went up to his father in a passion, saying, "A
              certain officer's son has abused me in my mother's name." Haroun asked his ministers,
              " What ought to be such a person's punishment?" One made a sign to have him put
              to death; another to have his tongue cut out; and a third, to have him fined and banished.
              Haroun said: "O my child! it were generous to forgive him; but if you have not
              resolution to do that, do you abuse his mother in return, yet not to such a degree as to
              exceed the bounds of retaliation, for in that case the injury would be on our part, and
              the complaint on that of the antagonist.---In the opinion of the prudent he is no hero
              that can dare to combat a furious elephant but that man is in truth a hero who, when
              provoked to anger, will not speak intemperately. A cross-grained fellow abused a certain
              person; he bore it patiently, and said "O well-disposed man! I am still more wicked
              than thou art calling me; for I know my defects better than thou canst know them."  
              XXXV 
              I was seated in a vessel, along with some persons of distinction, when a boat sunk
              astern of us and two brothers were drawn into the whirlpool. One of our gentlemen called
              to the pilot, saying, "Save those two drowning men and I will give you a hundred
              dinars." The pilot went and rescued one of them, but the other perished. I observed,
              "That man's time was come, therefore you were tardy in assisting him, and alert in
              saving this other." The pilot smiled, and replied, "What you say is the essence
              of inevitable necessity; yet was my zeal more hearty in rescuing this one, because on an
              occasion when I was tired in the desert he set me on a camel; whereas, when a boy I had
              received a horsewhipping from that other." God Almighty was all justice and
                equity: Whoever labored unto good experienced good in himself; And he who toiled unto evil
                experienced evil. So long as thou art able grate nobody's heart, for in this path
              there must be thorns. Expedite the concerns of the poor and needy; for thy own concerns
              may need to be expedited.  
              XXXVII 
              A person announced to Nushirowan the Just, saying, "I have heard that God,
              glorious and great, has removed from this world a certain man who was your enemy." He
              said, "Hhave you had any intelligence that he has overlooked me? In the death of a
              rival I have no room for exultation, since my life also is not to last forever."  
              XXXVIII 
              At the court of Kisra, or Nushirowan, a cabinet council was debating some State affair.
              Abu-zarchamahr, who sat as president, was silent. They asked him, "Why do you not
              join us in this discussion?" He replied, " Such ministers of State are like
              physicians, and a physician will prescribe a medicine only to a sick man; accordingly, so
              long as I see that your opinions are judicious, it were ill-judged in me to obtrude a
              word.---While business can proceed without my interference, it does not behoove me to
              speak on the subject; but were I to see a blind man walking into a pit, I would be much to
              blame if I remained silent."  
              XXXIX 
              When he reduced the kingdom of Misr, or to obedience, Haroun-al-Rashid said, " In
              contempt of that impious rebel (Pharaoh), who, in his pride of the sovereignty of Egypt,
              boasted a divinity, I will bestow its government only on the vilest of my slaves." He
              had a Negro bondsman, called Khosayib, preciously stupid, and him he appointed to rule
              over Egypt. They tell us that his judgment and understanding were such, that when a body
              of farmers complained to him, saying, "We had planted some cotton shrubs on the banks
              of the Nile, and the rains came unseasonably, and swept them all away," he replied,
              "You ought to sow wool, that it might not be swept away!" A good and holy man
              heard this, and said: "Were our fortune to be increased in proportion to our
              knowledge, none could be scantier than the share of the fool; but fortune will bestow such
              wealth upon the ignorant as shall astonish a hundred of the learned. Power and fortune
              depend not on knowledge, they are obtained only through the aid of heaven; for it has
              often happened in this world that the illiterate are honored, and the wise held in scorn.
              The fool in his idleness found a treasure under a ruin; the chemist, or projector, fell
              the victim of disappointment and chagrin."  
                
              Chapter II 
              Of The Morals Of Dervishes 
              I 
              A person of distinction asked a parsa, or devout and holy man, saying, "What do
              you offer in justification of a certain abid all other species of Muhammadan monk,
              whose character others have been so ready to question?" He replied: "In his
              outward behavior I see nothing to blame, and with the secrets of his heart I claim no
              acquaintance.---Whomsoever thou sees in a parsa's habit, consider him a parsa, or holy,
              and esteem him as a good man; and if thou know not what is passing in his mind, what
              business has the moatasib, or censor, with the inside of the house?"  
              II 
              I saw a dervish who, having laid his head at the fane of the Kaaba of Mecca, was
              complaining and saying, "O gracious, O merciful God! thou know what can proceed from
              the sinful and ignorant that may be worthy of thy acceptance!---I brought my excuse of
              imperfect performance, for I have no claim on the score of obedience. The wicked repent
              them of their sins; such as know God confess a deficiency of worship."  
                                           
              Abids, or the pious, seek a reward of their devotion, merchants a profit on
              their traffic. I, a devoted servant, have brought hope, not obedience, and have come as a
              beggar, and not for lucre! Do unto me what is worthy of thyself; but deal not with me
                as I myself have deserved. Whether thou wilt slay me or pardon my offense, my head and
              face are prostrate at thy threshold. Thy servant has no will of his own; whatever thou
              commands, that he will perform. At the door of the Kaaba I saw a petitioner, who was
              praying and weeping bitterly. I ask not, saying, "Approve of my obedience, but draw
              the pen of forgiveness across my sins."  
              III 
              Within the sanctuary of the Kaaba, at Mecca, I saw Abdu'l-cadur the Gilani, who having
              laid his face upon the Hasa, or black stone, was saying, "Spare and pardon me, O God!
              and if, at all events, I am doomed to punishment, raise me up at the day of resurrection
              blindfolded, that I may not be put to shame in the eyes of the righteous." Every
              morning when the day begins to dawn, with my face in the dust of humility, I am saying,
              "O thou, whom I never can forget, dost thou ever bestow a thought on thy
              servant?"  
              IV 
              A thief got into a holy man's cell; but, however much he searched, he could find
              nothing to steal, and was going away disappointed. The good soul was aware of what was
              passing, and taking up the rug on which he had slept, he put it in his way that he might
              not miss his object.---I have heard that the heroes on the path of God will not distress
              the hearts of their enemies. How canst thou attain this dignified station who art at
              strife and warfare with thy friends? The loving kindness of the righteous, whether before
              your face or behind your back, is not such that they will censure you when absent, and
              offer to die for you when present.---Face to face meek as a lamb, behind your back like a
              man devouring wolf. Whoever brings you, and sums up the faults of others, will doubtless
              expose your defects to them.  
              V 
              Some traveling mendicants had agreed to club in a body and participate in the cares and
              comforts of society. I expressed a wish that I might be one of the party, but they refused
              to admit me. I said: "It is rare and inconsistent with the generous dispositions of
              dervishes to turn their faces from a good-fellowship with the poor, and to deny them its
              benefits, for on my part I feel such a zeal and good-will, that in the service of the
              liberal I am likely to prove rather an active associate than a grievous load. Though
                not one of those who are mounted on the camels, I will do my best, that I may carry their
                saddle-cloths. One of them answered and said: "Be not offended at what you have
              heard for some days back a thief joined us in the garb of a dervish, and strung himself
              upon the cord of our acquaintance.---How can people know what he is that wears that dress?
              The writer can alone tell the contents of the letter." In consequence of that
              reverence in which the dervish character is held, they did not think of his profligacy and
              admitted him into their society. The outward character of the holy is a patched cloak;
              this much is sufficient, that it has a threadbare hood. Be industrious in thy calling, and
              wear whatever dress thou chooses. Put a diadem on thy head, and bear a standard on thy
              shoulder. Holiness does not consist in a coarse frock. Let a zahid, or holy man, be
              truly pious, and he may dress in satin. Sanctity is not merely a change of dress; it is an
              abandonment of the world, its pomp and vanity. It requires a hero to wear a coat of mail,
              for what would it profit to dress an hermaphrodite, or coward, in a suit of armor?  
              In short we had one day traveled 'till dark, and at night composed ourselves for sleep
              under the wall of a castle. That graceless thief took up his neighbor's ewer, saying,
              "I am going to my ablutions"; and he was setting out for plunder. Behold a
              religious man, who threw a patched cloak over his shoulders; he made the covering of the
              Kaaba the housing of an ass. So soon as he got out of sight of the dervishes, he scaled a
              bastion of the fort and stole a casket. Before break of day that gloomy-minded robber had
              got a great way off, and left his innocent companions asleep. In the morning they were all
              carried into the citadel, and thrown into a dungeon. From that time we have declined any
              addition to our party, and kept apart to ourselves, For there is safety in unity, But
                danger in duality or a multitude. When an individual of a sect committed an act of
              folly, the high and the low sank in their dignity. Dost thou not see that one ox in a
              pasturage will cast a slur upon all the oxen of the village? I said: "Let there be
              thanksgiving to a Deity of majesty and glory that I am not forbid the benefits of
              dervishes, notwithstanding I am in appearance excluded from their society; and I am
              instructed by this narration, and others like me may profit by its moral during their
              remaining lives.---From one indiscreet person in an assembly a host of the prudent may get
              hurt. If they fill a cistern to the brim with rose-water, and let a dog fall into it, the
              whole will be contaminated."  
              VI 
              A zahid was the guest of a king. When he sat down at table he ate more sparingly
              from that than his appetite inclined him, and when he stood up at prayers he continued
              longer at them than it was his custom; that they might form a high opinion of his
              sanctity.---I fear, O Arab! that thou wilt not reach the Kaaba; for the road that thou art
              taking leads to Turkestan, or the region of infidels. When he returned home he ordered the
              table to be spread that he might eat. His son was a youth of a shrewd understanding. He
              said: "O father, perhaps you ate little or nothing at the feast of the king?" He
              answered, "In his presence I ate scarce anything that could answer its purpose!"
              Then retorted the boy, "Repeat also your prayers, that nothing be omitted that can
              serve a purpose." Yes, thy virtues thou hast exposed in the palm of thy hand, thy
              vices thou has hid under thy arm-pit. Take heed, O hypocrite, what thou wilt be able to
              purchase with this base money on the day of need or day of judgment.  
              VII 
              I remember that in my early youth I was overmuch religious and vigilant, and
              scrupulously pious and abstinent. One night I sat up in attendance on my father, on whom
              be God's mercy, never once closed my eyes during the whole night, and held the precious
              Qur'an open on my lap, while the company around us were fast asleep. I said to my father:
              "Not an individual of these will raise his head that he may perform his
              genuflections, or ritual of prayer; but they are all so sound asleep, that you might
              conclude they were dead." He replied: "O emanation of your father, you had also
              better have slept than that you should thus calumniate the failings of mankind.---The
              braggart can discern only his own precious person; he will draw the veil of conceit all
              around him. Were fortune to bestow upon him God's all-searching eye, he would find nobody
              weaker than himself."  
              X 
              On one occasion, at the metropolitan mosque of Balbuk, I was holding forth, by way of
              admonition to a congregation cold and dead at heart, and not to be moved from the
              materialism of this world into the paths of mysticism. I perceived that the spirit of my
              discourse was making no impression, nor were the sparks of my enthusiasm likely to strike
              fire into their humid wood. I grew weary of instructing brutes, and of holding up a mirror
              to an assembly of the blind; but the door of exposition was thrown open, and the chain of
              argument extended; and in explanation of this text in the Qur'an, "We are nearer to
              him (God) than the vein of his neck"---I had reached that passage of my sermon where
              I thus express myself: "Such a mistress as is closer to me in her affection than I am
              to myself, but this is marvelous that I am estranged from her. What shall I say, and to
              whom can I tell it, that she lies on my bosom and I am alienated from her."  
              The intoxicating spirit of this discourse ran into my head, and the dregs of the cup
              still rested in my hand, when a traveler, as passing by, entered the outer circle of the
              congregation, and its expiring undulation lit upon him. He sent forth such a groan that
              the others in sympathy with him joined in lamentation, and the rawest of the assembly
              bubbled in unison. I exclaimed, "Praise be to God! those far off are present in their
              knowledge, and those near by are distant from their ignorance. If the hearer has not the
              faculty of comprehending the sermon, expect not the vigor of genius in the preacher. Give
              a scope to the field of inclination, that the orator may have room to strike the ball of
              eloquence over it."  
              XI 
              One night in the desert of Mecca, from an excess of drowsiness, I had not a foot to
              enable me to proceed; and, laying my head on the earth, I gave myself up for lost, and
              desired the camel-driver to leave me to my fate.---How could the foot of the poor jaded
              pedestrian go on, now that the Bactrian dromedary got impatient of its burden? While the
              body of a fat man is getting lean, a lean man must fall the victim of a hardship. The
              camel-driver replied: "O brother, holy Mecca is ahead, and the profane robber behind;
              if you come forward you escape, but if you stay here you die!" During the night
              journey of the caravan, and in the track of the desert, it is fascinating to doze under
              the acacia-thorn tree; but, on this indulgence, we must resign all thoughts of surviving
              it. 
              XII 
              I saw on the seashore a holy man who had been torn by a tiger, and could get no salve
              to heal his wound. For a length of time he suffered much pain, and was all along offering
              thanks to the Most High. They asked him, saying, "Why are you so grateful?" He
              answered, "God be praised that I am overtaken with misfortune and not with sin! Were
              that beloved friend, God, to give me over to death, take heed, and think not that I should
              be solicitous about life. I would ask, What hast thou seen amiss in thy poor servant that
              thy heart should take offense at me? for that could alone give me a moment's
              uneasiness." 
              XIII 
              Having some pressing occasion, a dervish stole a rug from the hut of a friend. The
              judge ordered that they should cut off his hand. The owner of the rug made intercession
              for him, saying, "I have forgiven him." The judge replied, At your instance I
              can not relax the extreme sentence of the law." He said: "In what you ordered
              you spoke justly. Nevertheless, whoever steals a portion of any property dedicated to alms
              must not suffer the forfeiture of his hand, for A religious mendicant is not the
                proprietor of anything; and whatever appertains to dervishes is devoted to the
              necessitous." The judge withdrew his hand from punishing him, and by way of reprimand
              asked, "Had the world become so circumscribed that you could not commit a theft but
              in the dwelling of such a friend?" He answered, "Have you not heard what they
              have said, ' Sweep everything away from the houses of your friends, but knock not at the
              doors of your enemies.' When overwhelmed with calamity let not thy body pine in misery.
              Strip thy foes of their skins, and thy friends of their jackets."  
              XIV 
              A king said to a holy man, "Are you ever thinking of me?" "Yes,"
              replied he, "at such times as I am forgetting God Almighty! He will wander all around
              whom God shall drive from his gate; and he will not let him go to another door whom he
              shall direct into his own."  
              XV 
              One of the righteous in a dream saw a king in paradise, and a parsa, or holy man, in
              hell. He questioned himself, saying, "What is the cause of the exaltation of this,
              and the degradation of that, for we have fancied their converse?" A voice came from
              above, answering, "This king is in heaven because of his affection for the holy, and
              that parsa is in hell because of his connection with the kingly."---What can a coarse
              frock, rosary, and patched cloak avail? Abstain from such evil works as may defile thee.
              There is no occasion to put a felt cowl upon thy head. Be a dervish in thy actions, and
              wear a Tartarian coronet.  
              XVI 
              A pedestrian, naked from head to foot, left Cufah with the caravan of pilgrims for
              Hijaz, or Mecca, and came along with us. I looked at and saw him destitute of every
              necessary for the journey; yet he was cheerfully pushing on, and bravely remarking:
              "I am neither mounted on a camel nor a mule under a burden. I am neither the lord of
              vassals nor the vassal of a lord. I think not of present sorrows or past vanities, but
              breathe the breath of ease and live the life of freedom!" A gentleman mounted on a
              camel said to him, "O dervish, whither are you going? return, or you must perish
              miserably." He did not heed what he said, but entered the desert on foot and
              proceeded. On our reaching the palm plantation of Mahmud, fate overtook the rich man, and
              he died. The dervish went up to his bier and said, "I did not perish amidst hardship
              on foot, and you expired on a camel's back." A person sat all night weeping by the
              side of a sick friend. Next day he died, and the invalid recovered!---Yes! many a fleet
              horse perished by the way, and that lame ass reached the end of the journey. How many of
              the vigorous and hale did they put underground, and that wounded man recovered!  
              XX 
              They asked Lucman, the fabulist, "From whom did you learn manners?" He
              answered, "From the unmannerly, for I was careful to avoid whatever part of their
              behavior seemed to me bad." They will not speak a word in joke from which the wise
              can not derive instruction; let them read a hundred chapters of wisdom to a fool, and they
              will all seem but a jest to him.  
              XXI 
              They tell a story of an abid, who in the course of a night would eat ten mans,
              or pounds, of food, and in his devotions repeat the whole Qur'an before morning. A good
              and holy man heard this, and said, "Had he eaten half a loaf of bread, and gone to
              sleep, he would have done a more meritorious act." Keep thy inside unencumbered with
              victuals, that the light of good works may shine within thee; but you art void of wisdom
              and knowledge, because thou art filled up to the nose with food.  
              XXII 
              The divine favor had placed the lamp of grace in the path of a wanderer in forbidden
              ways, 'till it directed him into the circle of the righteous, and the blessed society of
              dervishes, and their spiritual co-operation enabled him to convert his wicked propensities
              into praiseworthy deeds, and to restrain himself in sensual indulgences; yet were the
              tongues of calumniators questioning his sincerity, and saying, He retains his original
              habits, and there is no trusting to his piety and goodness.---By the means of repentance
              thou mayest get delivered from the wrath of God, but there is no escape from the
              slanderous tongue of man. He was unable to put up with the virulence of their remarks, and
              took his complaint to his ghostly father, saying, "I am much troubled by the tongues
              of mankind." The holy man wept, and answered, "How can you be sufficiently
              grateful for this blessing, that you are better than they represent you?---How often wilt
              thou call aloud, saying, The malignant and envious are calumniating wretched me, that they
              rise up to shed my blood, and that they sit down to devise me mischief. Be thou good
              thyself, and let people speak evil of thee; it is better than to be wicked, and that they
              should consider thee as good."---But, on the other hand, behold me, of whose
              perfectness all entertain the best opinion, while I am the mirror of imperfection.---Had I
              done what they have said, I should have been a pious and moral man. Verily, I may
                conceal myself from the sight of my neighbor, But God knows what is secret and what is
                open. There is a shut door between me and mankind, that they may not pry into my sins;
              but what, O Omniscience! can a closed door avail against thee, who art equally informed of
              what is manifest or concealed?  
              XXIII 
              I lodged a complaint with one of our reverend Shaikhs, saying: "A certain person
              has borne testimony against my character on the score of lasciviousness." He
              answered, "Shame him by your continence.---Be thou virtuously disposed, that the
              detractor may not have it in his power to indulge his malignity. So long as the harp is in
              tune, how can it have its ear pulled (or suffer correction by being put in tune) by the
              minstrel?"  
              XXIV 
              They asked one of the Shaikhs of Sham, or Syria, saying: "What is the condition of
              the Sufi sect?" He answered, "Formerly they were in this world a fraternity
              dispersed in the flesh, but united in the spirit; but now they are a body well clothed
              carnally, and ragged in divine mystery." Whilst thy heart will be every moment
              wandering into a different place, in thy recluse state thou canst not see purity; but
              though thou possesses rank and wealth, lands and chattels, if thy heart be fixed on God,
              thou art a hermit.  
              XXV 
              On one occasion we had marched, I recollect, all the night along with the caravan, and
              halted toward morning on the skirts of the wilderness. One mystically distracted, who
              accompanied us on that journey, set up a loud lamentation at dawn, went a-wandering into
              the desert, and did not take a moment's rest. Next day I said to him, "What condition
              was that?" He replied, "I remarked the nightingales that they had come to carol
              in the groves, the pheasants to prattle on the mountains, the frogs to croak in the pools,
              and the wild beasts to roar in the forests, and thought with myself, saying, It can not be
              generous that all are awake in God's praise and I am wrapped up in the sleep of
              forgetfulness!---Last night a bird was caroling toward the morning; it stole my patience
              and reason, my fortitude and understanding. My lamentation had perhaps reached the ear of
              one of my dearly-beloved friends. He said, 'I did not believe that the singing of a bird
              could so distract thee!' I answered, This is not the duty of the human species, that the
              birds are singing God's praise and that I am silent."  
              XXVI 
              Once, on a pilgrimage to Hijaz, I was the fellow-traveler of some piously disposed
              young men, and on a footing of familiarity and intimacy with them. From time to time we
              were humming a tune and chanting a spiritual hymn, and an abid, who bore us
              company, kept disparaging the morals of the dervishes, and was callous to their
              sufferings, 'till we reached the palm plantation of the tribe of Hulal, when a boy of a
              tawny complexion issued from the Arab horde and sang such a plaintive melody as would
              arrest the bird in its flight through the air. I remarked the abid's camel that it kicked
              up and pranced, and, throwing the abid, danced into the wilderness. I said: "O
              reverend Shaikh! that spiritual strain threw a brute into an ecstasy, and it is not in
              like manner working a change in you!--Know thou what that nightingale of the dawn
              whispered to me? What sort of man art thou, indeed, who art ignorant of love?---The camel
              is in an ecstasy of delight from the Arab's song. If thou hast no taste to relish this
              thou art a cross-grained brute---Now that the camel is elated with rapture and delight, if
              a man is insensible to these he is an ass. The zephyr, gliding through the verdure on
                the earth,Shakes the twig of the ban-tree, but moves not the solid rocks. Whatever
              thou beholdest is loud in extolling him. That heart which has an ear is full of the divine
              mystery. It is not the nightingale that alone serenades his rose; for every thorn on the
              rose-bush is a tongue in his or God's praise!"  
              XXVII 
              A king had reached the end of his days and had no heir to succeed him. He made his
                  will, stating, "You will place the crown of sovereignty upon the head of whatever
                  person first enters the city gate in the morning, and commit the kingdom to his
                  charge." It happened that the first man that presented himself at the city gate was a
                  beggar, who had passed his whole life in scraping broken meat and in patching rags. The
                  ministers of State and nobles of the court fulfilled the conditions of the king's will,
                  and laid the keys of the treasury and citadel at his feet. For a time the dervish governed
                  the kingdom, 'till some of the chiefs of the empire swerved from their allegiance, and the
                  princes of the territories on every side rose in opposition to him, and levied armies for
                  the contest. In short, his troops and subjects were routed and subdued, and several of his
                  provinces taken from him. The dervish was hurt to the soul at these events, when one of
                  his old friends, who had been the companion of his state of poverty, returned from a
                  journey and found him in such dignity. He exclaimed: "Thanksgiving be to a Deity of
                  majesty and glory that lofty fortune succored you and prosperity was your guide, 'till
                  roses issued from your thorns and the thorns were extracted from your feet, and 'till you
                  arrived at this elevated rank! Along with hardship there is ease; or, to sorrow
                    succeeds joy. The plant is at one season in flower and at another withered; the tree
                  is at one time naked and at another clothed with leaves." He said: "O, my dear
                  friend, offer me condolence, for here is no place for congratulation. When you last saw me
                  I had to think of getting a crumb of bread; now I have the cares of a whole kingdom on my
                  head." If the world be adverse, we are the victims of pain; if prosperous, the
                  fettered slaves of affection for it. Amidst this life no calamity is more afflicting than
                  that, whether fortunate or not, the mind is equally disquieted. If thou covet riches, ask
                  not but for contentment, which is an immense treasure. Should a rich man throw money into
                  thy lap, take heed, and do not look upon it as a benefit; for I have often heard from the
                  great and good that the patience of the poor is more meritorious than the gift of the
                  rich. Were King Bahram Ghor to distribute a whole roasted elk, it would not be equal to
                the gift of a locust's leg from an ant."  
              XXVIII 
              A person had a friend who was holding the office of king's divan, or prime minister,
                  and it happened that he had not seen him for some time. Somebody remarked, saying,
                "It is some time since you saw such a gentleman." He answered, "I am no
                  ways anxious about seeing him." One of the divan's people chanced to be present. He
                  asked, "What has happened amiss that you should dislike to visit him?" He
                  replied, "There is no dislike; but my friend, the divan, can be seen at a time when
                  he is out of office, and my idle intrusion might not come amiss." Amidst the State
                  patronage and authority of office they might take umbrage at their acquaintance; but on
                  the day of vexation and loss of place they would impart their mental disquietudes to their
                friends.  
              XXXV 
              They asked a profoundly learned man, saying, "What is your opinion of consecrated
                  bread, or alms taking?" He answered, "If with the view of composing their minds,
                  and promoting their devotions, it is lawful to take it; but if monks collect for the sake
                  of an endowment, it is forbidden. Good and holy men have received the bread of
                  consecration for the sake of religious retirement; and are not recluses, that they may
                receive such bread."  
              XXXVI 
              A dervish came to put up at a place where the master of the house was a gentleman of an
                  hospitable disposition. He had as his guests an assembly of learned and witty men, each of
                  whom was repeating such a jest, or anecdote, as is usual with the facetious. Having
                  traveled across a desert, the dervish was much fatigued, and well-nigh famished. One of
                  the company observed, in the way of pleasantry, "You must also repeat
                  something." The dervish answered, "I am not, like the others, overstocked with
                  learning and wit, nor am I much read in books; and you must be satisfied with my reciting
                  one distich." One and all eagerly cried, "Let us hear it." He said,
                "Hungry as I am, I sit by a table spread with food, like a bachelor at the entrance
                  of a bath full of women!" They applauded what he said, and ordered the tray to be
                  placed before him. The lord of the feast said, "Stay your appetite, my friend! 'till
                  my handmaids can prepare for you some forced meat." He raised his head from the tray,
                  and answered, "Say there is no need for forced meat on my tray, for a crust of plain
                bread is sufficient for one baked as I have been in the desert."  
              XXXVII 
              A disciple complained to his ghostly father, saying, "What can I do, for I am much
                  annoyed by the people, who are interrupting me with their frequent visits, and break in
                  upon my precious hours with their impertinent intrusions." He replied, "To such
                  of them as are poor lend money, and from such as are rich ask some in loan; and neither of
                  them will trouble you again." Let a beggar be the harbinger of an army of Islam, or
                the orthodox, and the infidel will fly his importunity as far as the wall of China.  
              XXXIX 
              A drunken fellow had lain down to sleep on the highway, and was quite overcome with the
                  fumes of intoxication. An abid was passing close by, and looking at him with scorn. The
                  youth raised his head, and said, "Whenever they pass anything shameful they pass
                    it with compassion. Whenever thou beholdest a sinner, hide and bear with his
                    transgressions: Thou, who art aware of them, why not overlook my sins with pity? Turn
                  not away, O reverend sir! from a sinner; but look upon him with compassion. Though in my
                actions I am not a hero, do thou pass by as the heroic would pass me."  
              XL 
              A gang of dissolute vagabonds broke in upon a dervish, used opprobrious language, and
                  beat and ill-used him. In his helplessness he carried his complaint before his ghostly
                  father, and said, "Thus it has befallen me." He replied: "O my son! the
                  patched cloak of dervishes is the garment of resignation; whosoever wears this garb, and
                  can not bear with disappointment, is a hypocrite, and to him our cloth is forbidden.---A
                  vast and deep river is not rendered turbid by throwing into it a stone. That religious man
                  who can be vexed at an injury is as yet a shallow brook.---If thou art subjected to
                  trouble, bear with it; for by forgiveness thou art purified from sin. Seeing, O brother!
                  that we are ultimately to become dust, be humble as the dust, before thou molders into
                dust."  
              XLI 
              Hear what occurred once at Baghdad in a dispute that took place between a roll-up
                  curtain and standard. Covered with the road-dust, and jaded with a march, the standard, in
                  reproach, observed to the curtain: "Thou and I are gentlemen in livery; we are
                  fellow-servants at the court of his majesty. I never enjoy a moment's relief from duty;
                  early and late I am equally marching. Thou hast never experienced any peril or a siege,
                  the heavy sand of the desert or dust of a whirlwind; my foot is most forward in any
                  enterprise. Then why art thou my superior in dignity? Thou art cared for by youths with
                  faces splendid as the moon, and handled by damsels scenting like jasmine; while I am
                  fallen into the hands of raw recruits, am rolled upon our march, and turned upside
                  down." The curtain answered: "I lay my head humble at the threshold, and hold it
                  not up like thine, flaring in the face of heaven! Whoever is thus vainly rearing his crest
                exalts himself only to be humbled."  
              XLII 
              A good and holy man saw a huge and strong fellow, who, having got much enraged, was
                  storming with passion and foaming at the mouth. He asked, "What has happened to this
                  man?" Somebody answered, "Such a one has given him bad names!" He said,
                "This paltry wretch is able to carry a thousand-weight of stone, and can not bear
                  with one light word! Cease to boast of thy strong arm and pretended manhood, infirm as
                  thou art in mind, and mean in spirit. What difference is there between such a man and a
                  woman? Though thou art strong of arm, let thy mouth utter sweet words; it is no proof of
                  courage to thrust thy fist into another man's face.---Though thou art able to tear the
                  scalp off an elephant, if deficient in humanity, thou art no hero. The sons of Adam are
                formed from dust; if not humble as the I dust, they fall short of being men." 
              XLIV 
              A facetious old gentleman of Baghdad gave his daughter in marriage to a shoemaker. The
                  flint-hearted fellow bit so deeply into the damsel's lip that the blood trickled from the
                  wound. Next morning the father found her in this plight; he went up to his son-in-law, and
                  asked him, saying: "Lowborn wretch! what sort of teeth are these that thou shouldst
                  chew her lips as if they were a piece of leather? I speak not in play what I have to say.
                  Lay jesting aside, and take with her thy legal enjoyment.---When once a vicious
                disposition has taken root in the habit, the hand of death can only eradicate it."  
              XLV 
              A doctor of laws had a daughter preciously ugly, and she had reached the age of
                  womanhood; but, notwithstanding her dowry and fortune, nobody seemed inclined to ask her
                  in marriage.---Damask or brocade but add to her deformity when put upon a bride void of
                  symmetry. In short, they were under the necessity of uniting her in the bonds of wedlock
                  to a blind man. They add, that soon after there arrived from Sirandip, or Ceylon, a
                  physician that could restore sight to the blind. They spoke to the law doctor, saying,
                "Why do you not get him to prescribe for your son-in-law?" He answered:
                "Because I am afraid he may recover his sight, and repudiate my daughter; for--- 'the
                Husband of an ugly woman should be blind.'"  
              XLVIII 
              They asked a wise man which was preferable, munificence or courage? He answered,
                "Whoever has munificence has no need of courage." On the tombstone of
                  Bahram-Ghgor was inscribed: "The hand of liberality is stronger than the arm of
                  power.---Hatim Tayi remains not, yet will his exalted name live renowned for generosity to
                  all eternity. Distribute the tithe of thy wealth in alms, for the more the gardener prunes
                his vine the more he adds to his crop of grapes."  
                
              Chapter III 
              On The Preciousness Of Contentment 
              I 
              A mendicant from the west of Africa had taken his station amidst a group of shopkeepers
                  at Aleppo, and was saying: "O lords of plenty! had ye a just sense of equity, and we
                  of contentment, all manner of importunity would cease in this world!" O contentment!
                  do thou make me rich, for without thee there is no wealth. The treasure of patience was
                the choice of Lokman. Whoever has no patience has no wisdom.  
              II 
              There dwelt in Egypt two youths of noble birth, one of whom applied himself to study
                  knowledge, and the other to accumulate wealth. In process of time that became the wisest
                  man of his age, and this King of Egypt. Then was the rich man casting an eye of scorn upon
                  his philosophic brother, and saying, "I have reached a sovereignty, and you remain
                  thus in a state of poverty." He replied: "O brother! I am all the more grateful
                  for the bounty of a Most High God, whose name was glorified, that I have found the
                  heritage of the prophets---namely, wisdom; and you have got the estate of Pharaoh and
                  Haman---that is, the kingdom of Egypt. I am an ernmet, that mankind shall tread under
                  foot; not a hornet, that they shall complain of my sting. How can I sufficiently express
                  my grateful sense of this blessing, that I possess not the means of injuring my fellow
                creatures?"  
              III 
              I heard of a dervish who was consuming in the flame of want, tacking patch after patch
                  upon his ragged garment, and solacing his mind with this couplet: "I can rest content
                  with a dry crust of bread and a coarse woolen frock, for the burden of my own exertion
                  bears lighter than laying myself under obligation to another."---Somebody observed to
                  him, "Why do you sit quiet, while a certain gentleman of this city is so nobly
                  disposed and universally benevolent, that he has girt up his loins in the service of the
                  religious independents, and seated himself by the door of their hearts? Were he apprised
                  of your condition, he would esteem himself obliged, and be happy in the opportunity of
                  relieving it." He said: "Be silent; for it is better to die of want than to
                  expose our necessities before another, as they have remarked: 'Patching a tattered cloak
                  and the consequent treasure of content, is more commendable than petitioning the great for
                  every new garment.'" By my troth, I swear it were equal to the torments of hell to
                enter into paradise through the interest of a neighbor.  
              IV 
              One of the Persian kings sent a skillful physician to attend Mohammed Mustafa, on whom
                  be salutation. He remained some years in the territory of the Arabs; but nobody went to
                  try his skill, or asked him for any medicine. One day he presented himself before the
                  blessed prince of prophets, and complained, saying, "The king had sent me to dispense
                  medicine to your companions; but, 'till this moment, nobody has been so good as to enable
                  me to practice any skill that this your servant may possess." The blessed messenger
                  of God was pleased to answer, saying, "It is a rule with this tribe never to eat
                  'till hard pressed by hunger, and to discontinue their repast while they have yet an
                  appetite." The physician said, "This accounts for their health." Then he
                  kissed the earth of respect and took his leave. The physician will then begin to inculcate
                  temperance, or to extend the finger of indulgence, when from silence his patient might
                  suffer by excess, or his life be endangered by abstinence: of course, the skill of the
                physician is advice, and the patient's regimen and diet yield the fruits of health!  
              V 
              A certain person would be making vows of abstinence and breaking them. At last a
                  reverend gentleman observed to him, "So I understand that you make a practice of
                  eating to excess; and that any restraint on your appetite, namely, this vow, is weaker
                  than a hair, and this voraciousness, as you indulge it, would break an iron chain; but the
                  day must come when it will destroy you." A man was rearing the whelp of a wolf; when
                full grown it tore its patron and master.  
              VI 
              In the annals of Ardashir Babagan it is recorded that he asked an Arabian physician,
                  saying, "What quantity of food ought to be eaten daily?" He replied, "A
                  hundred dirams' weight were sufficient." The king said, "What strength can a man
                  derive from so small a quantity?" The physician replied: "So much can support
                  you; but in whatever you exceed that you must support it.---Eating is for the purpose of
                living, and speaking in praise of God; but thou believest that we live only to eat."  
              VII 
              Two dervishes of Khorassan were fellow-companions on a journey. One was so spare and
                  moderate that he would break his fast only every other night, and the other so robust and
                  intemperate that he ate three meals a day. It happened that they were taken up at the gate
                  of a city on suspicion of being spies, and both together put into a place, the entrance of
                  which was built up with mud. After a fortnight it was discovered that they were innocent,
                  when, on breaking open the door, they found the strong man dead, and the weak one alive
                  and well. They were astonished at this circumstance. A wise man said, "The contrary
                  of this had been strange, for this one was a voracious eater, and not having strength to
                  support a want of food, perished; and that other was abstemious, and being patient,
                  according to his habitual practice, survived it.---When a person is habitually temperate,
                  and a hardship shall cross him, he will get over it with ease; but if he has pampered his
                  body and lived in luxury, and shall get into straitened circumstances, he must
                perish."  
              XI 
              In a battle with the Tartars, a gallant young man was grievously wounded. Somebody said
                  to him, "A certain merchant has a stock of the mummy antidote; if you would ask him,
                  he might perhaps accommodate you with a portion of it." They say that merchant was so
                  notorious for his stinginess, that--- "If, in the place of his loaf of bread, the orb
                  of the sun had been in his wallet, nobody would have seen daylight in the world 'till the
                  day of judgment." The spirited youth replied: "Were I to ask him for this
                  antidote, he might give it, or he might not; and if he did it might cure me, or it might
                  not; at any rate, to ask such a man were itself a deadly poison!" Whatever thou
                  wouldst ask of the mean, in obligation, might add to the body, but would take from the
                  soul.---And philosophers have observed, that were the water of immortality, for example,
                  to be sold at the price of the reputation, a wise man would not buy it, for an honorable
                  death is preferable to a life of infamy.---Wert thou to eat colocynth from the hand of the
                kind-hearted, it would relish better than a sweetmeat from that of the crabbed.  
              XII 
              One of the learned had a large family and small means. He stated his case to a great
                  man, who entertained a favorable opinion of his character. This one turned away from his
                  solicitation, and viewed this prostitution of begging as discreditable with a gentleman of
                  education. If soured by misfortune, present not thyself before a dear friend, for thou may
                  also embitter his pleasure. When thou brings forward a distress, do it with a cheerful and
                  smiling face, for an openness of countenance can never retard business.---They have
                  related that he rose a little in the pension, but sank much in the estimation of the great
                  man. After some days, when he perceived this falling off in his affection, he said: Miserable
                    is that supply of food which thou obtains in the hour of need; The pot is put to boil, but
                    my reputation is bubbled into vapor. ---He added to my means of subsistence, but took
                from my reputation; absolute starving were better than the disgrace of begging."  
              XIII 
              A dervish had a pressing call for money. Somebody told him a certain person is
                  inconceivably rich; were he made aware of your want, he would somehow manage to
                  accommodate it. He said, "I do not know him." The other answered, "I will
                  introduce you"; and having taken his hand, he brought him to that person's dwelling.
                  The dervish beheld a man with a hanging lip, and sitting in sullen discontent. He said
                  nothing, and returned home. His friend asked, "What have you done?" He replied,
                "His gift I gave in exchange for his look: Lay not thy words before a man with a sour
                  face, otherwise thou may be ruffled by his ill-nature. If thou tell the sorrows of thy
                  heart let it be to him in whose countenance thou may be assured of prompt
                consolation."  
              XVI 
              The Prophet Moses, on whom be peace, saw a dervish who had buried his body, in his want
                  of clothes to cover it, in the sand. He said: "O Moses, put up a prayer, that the
                  Most High God would bestow a subsistence upon me, for I am perishing in distress."
                The blessed Moses prayed accordingly, that God on high would succor him. Some days
                afterward, as he was returning from a conference with God on Mount Sinai, he met that
                dervish in the hands of justice, and a mob following him. He asked: "What has
                  befallen this man?" They answered: "He had drunk wine and got into a quarrel,
                  and having killed somebody, they are now going to exact retaliation."---The God who
                  set forth the seven climates of this world assigned to every creature its appropriate lot.
                  Had that wretched cat been gifted with wings, she would not have left one sparrow's egg on
                  the earth. It might happen that were a weak man to get the ability, he would rise and
                domineer over his weak brethren.  
              The blessed Moses acknowledged the wisdom of the Creator of the universe, and
                  confessing his own presumption, repeated this verse of the Qur'an: "Were God to
                  spread abroad his stores of subsistence to servants, verily they would rebel all over the
                  earth": What happened, O vain man! that thou didst precipitate thyself into
                  destruction? Would that the ant might not have the means of flying!---A mean person, when
                  he has got rank and wealth, will bring a storm of blows upon his head. Was not this at
                  last the adage of a philosopher, 'That ant is best disposed of that has no wings.' ---The
                  father is a man of much sweetness of disposition, but the son is full of heat and
                  passions.---That Being, God, who would not make thee rich, must have known thy good better
                than thou could thyself know it.  
              XVII 
              I saw an Arab, who was standing amidst a circle of jewelers at Busrah, and saying:
                "On one occasion I had missed my way in the desert, and having no road-provision
                  left, I had given myself up for lost, when all at once I found a bag of pearls. Never
                  shall I forget that relish and delight, so long as I mistook them for parched wheat; nor
                  that bitterness and disappointment, when I discovered that they were real pearls." In
                  the mouth of the thirsty traveler, amidst parched deserts and moving sands, pearl, or
                  mother-of-pearl, were equally distasteful. To a man without provision, and exhausted in
                the desert, a piece of stone or of gold, in his scrip, is all one.  
              XVIII 
              An Arab, suffering under all the extremity of thirst in the desert, was saying: "Would
                  to God that yet, before I perish, I could but for or day gratify my wish: That a stream of
                  water might dash against my knees, and could fill my leathern flask or stomach with
                  it." In like manner a traveler had got bewildered in the great desert, and had
                  neither provisions nor strength left, yet a few dirhams remained with him in his scrip. He
                  kept wandering about, but could not find the path, and sank under his fatigue. A party of
                  travelers arrived where his body lay; they saw the dirams spread before him, and these
                  verses written in the sand: "Were he possessed of all the gold of Jafier (a famous
                  gold refiner), a man without food could not satisfy his appetite. To a wretched mendicant,
                  parched in the desert, a boiled turnip would relish better than an ingot of virgin
                silver."  
              XIX 
              I had never complained of the vicissitudes of fortune, nor murmured at the ordinances
                  of heaven, excepting on one occasion, that my feet were bare, and I had not wherewithal to
                  shoe them. In this desponding state I entered the metropolitan mosque at Khufah, and there
                  I beheld a man that had no feet. I offered up praise and thanksgiving for God's goodness
                  to myself, and submitted with patience to my want of shoes.---In the eyes of one satiated
                  with meat a roast fowl is less esteemed at his table than a salad; but to him who is
                stinted of food a boiled turnip will relish like a roast fowl.  
              XX 
              A king, attended by a select retinue, had on a sporting excursion during the winter,
                  got at a distance from any of his hunting-seats, and the evening was closing fast, when
                  they espied from afar a peasant's cottage. The king said: "Let us repair thither for
                  the night, that we may shelter ourselves from the inclemency of the weather." One of
                  the courtiers replied: "It would not become the dignity of the sovereign to take
                  refuge in the cottage of a low peasant; we can pitch a tent here and kindle a fire."
                The peasant saw what was passing; he came forward with what refreshments he had at hand,
                and, laying them before the king, kissed the earth of subserviency, and said: "The
                  lofty dignity of the king would not be lowered by this condescension; but these gentlemen
                  did not choose that the condition of a peasant should be exalted." The king was
                  pleased with this speech; and they passed the night at his cottage. In the morning he
                  bestowed an honorary dress and handsome largess upon him. I have heard that the peasant
                  was resting his hand for some paces upon the king's stirrup, and saying: "The state
                  and pomp of the sovereign suffered no degradation by his condescension in becoming a guest
                  at the cottage of a peasant; but the corner of the peasant's cap rose to the level with
                the sun when the shadow of such a monarch as thou art fell upon his head."  
              XXI 
              They tell a story of an importunate mendicant who had amassed much riches. A certain
                  king said: "It seems that you possess immense wealth, and I have a business of some
                  consequence in hand. If you will assist me with a little of it, by way of a loan, when the
                  public revenue is realized I will repay it and thank you to the bargain." He replied:
                "O sire, it would ill become the sublime majesty of the sovereign of the universe to
                  soil the hand of lofty enterprise with the property of such a mendicant as I am, which I
                  have scraped together grain by grain." He said: "There is no occasion to vex
                  yourself, for I mean it for the Tartars, as impurities are suiting for the impure: "They
                    said, 'The compost of a dung-hill is unclean.' We replied, 'That with it we u ill fill up
                    the chinks of a necessary.'" "If the water of a Christian's well is defiled,
                  and we wash a Jew's corpse in it, there is no sin." I have heard that he disobeyed
                  the royal command, questioned its justice, and resisted it with insolence. The king
                  ordered that the exchequer stipulations should be put in force with rigidness and
                  violence. When a business can not be settled with fair words, we must of necessity make
                  use of foul. When a man will not contribute of his own free will, if another enforces him
                he meets his desert.  
              XXII 
              I knew a merchant who had a hundred and fifty camels of burden and forty bondsmen and
                  servants in his train. One night he entertained me at his lodgings in the island of Keish,
                  in the Persian Gulf, and continued for the whole night talking idly, and saying:
                "Such a store of goods I have in Turkestan, and such an assortment of merchandise in
                  Hindustan; this is the mortgage-deed of a certain estate, and this the security bond of a
                  certain individual's concern." Then he would say: "I have a mind to visit
                  Alexandria, the air of which is salubrious; but that can not be, for the Mediterranean Sea
                  is boisterous. O Sadi! I have one more journey in view, and, that once accomplished, I
                  will pass my remaining life in retirement and leave off trade." I asked: "What
                  journey is that?" He replied: "I will carry the sulphur of Persia to Chin,
                  where, I have heard, it will fetch a high price; thence I will take China porcelain to
                  Greece; the brocade of Greece or Venice I will carry to India; and Indian steel I will
                  bring to Aleppo; the glassware of Aleppo I will take to Yemen; and with the bardimani, or
                  striped stuffs, of Yemen I will return to Persia. After that I will give up foreign
                  commerce and settle myself in a warehouse." He went on in this melancholy strain
                  'till he was quite exhausted with speaking. He said: "O Sadi! do you too relate what
                  you have seen and heard." I replied: "Hast thou not heard that in the desert of
                  Ghor as the body of a chief merchant fell exhausted from his camel, he said, 'Either
                  contentment or the dust of the grave will fill the stingy eye of the worldly
                minded.'"  
              XXIV 
              A weak fisherman got a strong fish into his net, but not having the power of mastering
                  it, the fish got the better of him, and, dragging the net from his hand, escaped.---A
                  bondsman went that he might take water from the brook; the brook came to rise and carried
                  off the bondsman. On most occasions the net would bring out the fish; on this occasion the
                  fish escaped, and took away the net. The other fishermen expressed their vexation, and
                  reproached him, saying, "Such a fish came into your net, and you were not able to
                  master it." He replied: "Alas! my brethren, what could be done? It was not my
                  day of fortune, and the fish had in this way another day left it. And they have said:
                  'Unless it be his lot, the fisherman can not catch a fish in the Tigris; and, except it be
                its fate, the fish will not die on the dry shore.'"  
              XXV 
              A person without hands or feet killed a millepede. A good and holy man passed by him at
                  the time, and said: "Glory be to God! notwithstanding the thousand feet he had when
                  his destiny overtook him, he was unable to escape from one destitute of hand or
                  foot."---When the life-plundering foe comes up behind, fate arrests the speed of the
                  swift-going warrior. At the moment when the enemy might approach step by step it were
                useless to bend the kayani, or Parthian bow.  
              XXVI 
              I met a fat blockhead decked in rich apparel, and mounted on an Arab horse, with a
                  turban of fine Egyptian linen on his head. A person said: "O Sadi, how comes it that
                  you see these garments of the learned on this ignorant beast?" I replied: "It is
                a vile epistle which has been written in golden letters:  
                
              "Verily this ass, with the resemblance of a man, Has the carcass of a calf, and
                the voice or bleating of a calf.'" Thou canst not say that this brute appears
                like a man, unless in his garments, turban, and outward form. Examine into all the ways
                and means of his existence, and thou shalt find nothing lawful but the shedding of his
                blood: though a man of noble birth be reduced to poverty, imagine not that his lofty
                dignity can be lowered; and though he may secure his silver threshold with a hasp of gold,
                conclude not that a Jew can be thereby ennobled."  
              XXVII 
              A thief said to a mendicant: "Are you not ashamed when you hold forth your hand to
                  every mean fellow for a barley corn of silver?" He replied: "It is better to
                  hold forth the hand for one grain of silver than to have it cut off for one and a half
                dang."  
              XXIX 
              I saw a dervish who had withdrawn into a cave, shut the door of communication between
                  the world and himself, and with his lofty and independent eye viewed emperors and kings
                  without awe or reverence.---Whoever opens to himself the door of mendacity must continue a
                  beggar 'till the day of his death. Put covetousness aside, and be independent as a prince;
                  the neck of contentment can raise its head erect. One of the sovereigns of those parts
                  sent a message to him, stating: "So far I can rely on the generous disposition of his
                  reverence, that he will one day favor me by partaking of my bread and salt, by becoming my
                  guest." The shaikh, or holy man, consented; for the acceptance of such an invitation
                  accorded with the sunnah, or law and tradition of the prophet. Next day the king went to
                  apologize for the trouble he had caused him. The abid rose from his place, took the king
                  in his arms, showed him much kindness, and was full of his compliments. After he was gone,
                  one of the shaikh's companions asked him, saying: "Was not such condescending
                  kindness as you this day showed the king contrary to what is usual; what does this
                  mean?" He answered: "Have you not heard what they have said: 'It is proper to
                  stand up and administer to him whom thou hast seated on thy carpet, or made thy
                  guest.'" He could so manage that, during his whole life, his ear should not indulge
                  in the music of the tabor, cymbal, and pipe. He could restrain his eyes from enjoying the
                  garden, and gratify his sense of smell without the rose or narcissus. Though he had not a
                  pillow stuffed with down, he could compose himself to rest with a stone under his head;
                  though he had no heart-solacer as the partner of his bed, he could hug himself to sleep
                  with his arms across his breast. If he could not ride an ambling nag, he was content to
                  take his walk on foot; only this grumbling and vile belly he could not keep under, without
                stuffing it with food.  
                
              Chapter IV 
              On The Benefit Of Being Silent 
              I 
              I spoke to one of my friends, saying: "A prudent restraint on my words is on that
                  account advisable, because in conversation there on most occasions occur good and bad; and
                  the eyes of rivals only note what is bad. He replied: "O brother! that is our best
                  rival who does not, or will not, see our good! The malignant brotherhood pass not by the
                virtuous man Without imputing to him what is infamous.  
              To the eye of enmity, virtue appears the ugliest blemish; it is a rose, O Sadi! which
                to the eyes of our rivals seems a thorn. The world-illuminating brilliancy of the fountain
                of the sun, in like manner, appears dim to the eye of the purblind mole."  
              II 
              A merchant happened to lose a thousand dinars. He said to his son: "It will be
                  prudent not to mention this loss to anybody." The son answered: "O father, it is
                  your orders, and I shall not mention it; but communicate the benefit so far, as what the
                  policy may be in keeping it a secret." He said: "That I may not suffer two
                  evils: one, the loss of my money; another, the reproach of my neighbor.---Impart not thy
                  grievances to rivals, for they are glad at heart, while praying, God preserve us; or "There
                  is neither strength nor power, unless it be from God!'" 
              III 
              A sensible youth made vast progress in the arts and sciences, and was of a docile
                  disposition; but however much he frequented the societies of the learned, they never could
                  get him to utter a word. On one occasion his father said: "O my son, why do not you
                  also say what you know on this subject?" He replied: "I am afraid lest they
                  question me upon what I know not, and put me to shame.---Hast thou not heard of a Sufi who
                  was hammering some nails into the sole of his sandal. An officer of cavalry took him by
                  the sleeve, saying, 'Come along, and shoe my horse.'---So long as thou art silent and
                  quiet, nobody will meddle with thy business; but once thou divulges it, be ready with thy
                proofs."  
              IV 
              A man, respectable for his learning, got into a discussion with an atheist; but,
                  failing to convince him, he threw down his shield and fled. A person asked him, "With
                  all your wisdom and address, learning and science, how came you not to controvert an
                  infidel?" He replied: "My learning is the Qur'an, and the traditions and sayings
                  of our holy fathers; but he puts no faith in the articles of our belief, and what good
                  could it do to listen to his blasphemy?" To him whom thou canst not convince by
                revelation or tradition, the best answer is that thou shalt not answer him.  
              VI 
              They have esteemed Sahban Wabil as unrivaled in eloquence, insomuch that he could speak
                  for a year before an assembly, and would not use the same word twice; or should he chance
                  to repeat it, he would give it a different signification; and this is one of the special
                  accomplishments of a courtier.---Though a speech be captivating and sweet, worthy of
                  belief, and meriting applause, yet what thou hast once delivered thou must not repeat, for
                if they eat a sweetmeat once they find that enough.  
              VII 
              I overheard a sage, who was remarking: "Never has anybody acknowledged his own
                  ignorance, except in that person who, while another may be talking, and has not finished
                  what he has to say, will begin speaking: "A speech, O wiseacre! has a beginning and
                  an end; bring not one speech into the middle of another. A man of judgment, discretion,
                and prudence, delivers not his speech 'till he find an interval of silence."  
              VIII 
              Some of the courtiers of Sultan Mahmud asked Husan Maimandi, saying: "What did the
                  king whisper to you today on a certain State affair?" He said: "You are also
                  acquainted with it." They replied: "You are the prime minister; what the king
                  tells you, he does not think proper to communicate to such as we are." He replied:
                "He communicates with me in the confidence that I will not divulge to anybody; then
                  why do you ask me?" A man of sense blabs not, whatever he may come to know; he should
                not make his own head the forfeit of the king's secret.  
              IX 
              I was hesitating about the purchase of a dwelling-house. A Jew said: "I am an old
                  housekeeper in this street: ask the character of this house from me and buy it, for it has
                  no fault." I replied: "True ! only that you are its neighbor. ---Any such house
                  as has thee for its neighbor could scarce be worth ten dirhams of silver; yet it should
                behoove us to hope that after thy death it may fetch a thousand."  
              X 
              A certain poet presented himself before the chief of a gang of robbers, and recited a casidah,
                  or elegy, in his praise. He ordered that they should strip off his clothes, and thrust him
                  from the village. The naked wretch was going away shivering in the cold, and the village
                  dogs were barking at his heels. He stooped to pick up a stone, in order to shy at the
                  dogs, but found the earth frost-bound, and was disappointed. He exclaimed: "What
                  rogues these villagers are, for they let loose their dogs, and tie up their stones!"
                The chief robber saw and overheard him from a window. He smiled at his wit, and, calling
                him near, said: "O learned sir! ask me for a boon." He replied, "I ask for
                  my own garments, if you will vouchsafe to give them. I shall have enough of boons in
                    your suffering me to depart. Mankind expects charity from others; I expect no charity
                  from thee, only do me no injury." The chief robber felt compassion for him. He
                ordered his clothes to be restored, and added to them a robe of fur and sum of money.  
              XIII 
              At a mosque in the city of Sanjar, the capital of Khorassan, a person was volunteering
                  to chant forth the call to prayers with so discordant a note as to drive all that heard
                  him away in disgust. The intendant of that mosque was a just and well-disposed gentleman,
                  who was averse to giving offense to anybody. He said: "O generous youth, there belong
                  to this mosque some muezzins, or criers, of long standing, to each of whom I allow a
                  monthly stipend of five dinars; now I will give you ten to go elsewhere." To this he
                  agreed, and took himself off. After a while he came to the nobleman, and said: "O my
                  lord! you did me an injury when for ten dinars you prevailed upon me to quit this station,
                  for where I went they offered me twenty to remove to another place, but I would not
                  consent." The nobleman smiled and replied: "Take heed, and do not accept them,
                  for they may be content to give you fifty!---No person can with a mattock scrape off the
                  clay from the face of a hard rock in so grating a manner as thy harsh voice is harrowing
                up my soul."  
              XIV 
              A person with a harsh voice was reciting the Qur'an in a loud tone. A good and holy man
                  went up to him, and asked: "What is your monthly stipend?" He answered,
                "Nothing." "Then," added he, "why give yourself so much
                  trouble?" He said: "I am reading for the sake of God." The good and holy
                  man replied: "For God's sake do not reads for if thou chant the Qur'an after this
                manner, thou must cast a shade over the glory of Islam or Muslim orthodoxy."  
                
              Chapter V 
              On Love And Youth I 
              They asked Husan Maimandi: "How comes it that Sultan Mahmud, who has so many
                  handsome bonds women, each of whom is the wonder of the world and most select of the age,
                  entertains not such fondness and affection for any of them as he does for Ayaz, who can
                  boast of no superiority of charms?" He replied: "Whatever makes an impression on
                  the heart seems lovely in the eye. That person of whom the sultan makes choice must be
                  altogether good, though a compendium of vice; but where he is estranged from the favor of
                  the king none of the household will think of courting him." Were a person to view it
                  with a fastidious eye, the form of a Joseph might seem a deformity; but let him look with
                desire on a demon, and he will appear like an angel and cherub.  
              III 
              I saw a parsa, or holy man, so enamored of a lovely person that he had neither
                  fortitude to bear with, nor resolution to declare, his passion; and, however much he was
                  the object of remark and censure, he would not forego this infatuation, and was saying:
                "I quit not my hold on the skirt of thy garment, though thou may verily smite me with
                  a sharp sword. Besides thee I have neither asylum nor defense; if I am to flee, I must
                  take refuge with thee." On one occasion I reproached him, and said: "What is
                  become of your precious reason, that a vile passion should thus master you?" He made
                  a short pause, and replied: "Wherever the king of love came, he left no room for the
                  strong arm of chastity. How can that wretch live undefiled who has fallen in a quagmire up
                to the neck?"  
              IV 
              A certain person had lost his heart and abandoned himself to despair. The object of his
                  desire was not such a dainty that he could gratify his palate with it, or a bird that he
                  could lure it into his net, but a frightful precipice and overwhelming whirlpool.---When
                  thy gold attracts not the charmer's eye, dust or gold is of equal value with thee. His
                  friends admonished him, saying: "Put aside this vain fancy, for multitudes are in the
                  durance and chains of this same passion which you are cherishing." He sighed aloud,
                  and replied: "Say to my friends, Do not admonish me, for my eye is fixed on the wish
                  of her. With strength of wrist and power of shoulders warriors overwhelm their antagonists
                  and charmers their lovers." Nor can it be consistent with the condition of love that
                  any thought of life should divert the heart from affection for its mistress.---Thou, who
                  art the slave of thine own precious self, play false in the affairs of love. If thou canst
                  not make good a passage to thy mistress, it is the duty of a lover to perish in the
                  attempt.---I persist when policy is no longer left me, though the enemy may cover me all
                  over with the wounds of swords and arrows. If I can reach her I will seize her sleeve, or
                at all events proceed and die at her threshold.  
              His kindred, whose business it was to watch over his concerns, and to pity his
                  misfortunes, gave him advice, and put upon him restraints, but all to no good
                  purpose.---The physician is, alas! prescribing bitter-aloes, and his depraved appetite is
                  craving sweetmeats!---Heardest thou what a charmer was saying in a whisper to one who had
                  lost his heart to her: "So long as thou maintains thine own dignity, of what value
                  can my dignity appear in thine eye?" They informed the princess who was the object of
                  his infatuation, saying: "A youth of an amiable disposition and sweet flow of tongue
                  is frequent in his attendance at the top of this plain; and we hear him delivering
                  brilliant speeches and wonderful sallies of wit; it would seem that he has a mystery in
                  his head and a flame in his heart, for he appears to be distractedly in love." The
                  princess was aware that she had become the object of his attachment, and that this
                  whirlwind of calamity was raised by himself, and spurred her horse toward him. Now that
                  the youth saw that it was the princess' intention to approach him, he wept, and said:
                "That personage who inflicted upon me a mortal wound again presented herself before
                  me; perhaps she took compassion upon her own victim." However, kindly she spoke, and
                  asked, saying: "Who are you, and whence come you? what is your name, and what your
                  calling?" The youth was so entirely overwhelmed in the ocean of love and passion that
                  he absolutely could not utter a word: "Could thou in fact repeat the seven Saba, or
                  whole Qur'an by heart, if distracted with love, thou wouldst forget the
                  alphabet?"---the princess continued: " Why do you not answer me? for I too am
                  one of the sect of dervishes, nay, I am their most devoted slave." On the strength of
                  this sympathizing encouragement of his beloved, the youth raised his head amidst the
                  buffeting waves of tempestuous passion, and answered: "It is strange that with thee
                  present I should remain in existence; that after thou camest to talk, I should have speech
                  left me."---This he said, and, uttering a loud groan, surrendered his soul up to
                  God.---No wonder if he died by the door of his beloved's tent; the wonder was, if alive,
                how he could have brought his life back in safety.  
              V 
              A boy at school possessed much loveliness of person and sweetness of conversation; and
                  the master, from the frailty of human nature, was enamored of his blooming skin. Like his
                  other scholars, he would not admonish and correct him, but when he found him in a corner
                  he would whisper in his ear: "I am not, O celestial creature! so occupied with thee,
                  that I am harboring in my mind a thought of myself. Were I to perceive an arrow coming
                  right into it, I could not shut my eye from contemplating thee." On one occasion the
                  boy said: "In like manner, as you inspect my duties, also animadvert on my tendency
                  to vice, in order that if you discern any immorality in my behavior, which has met my own
                  approbation, you can warn me against it, that I may correct it." He replied: "O
                  my child! propose this task to somebody else; for the light in which I view you reflects
                  nothing but virtue." That malignant eye, let it be plucked out in whose sight his
                  virtue can seem vice. Hadst thou but one perfection and seventy faults, the lover could
                discern only that one perfection.  
              VII 
              A person who had not seen his friend for a length of time said to him: "Where were
                  you? for I have been very solicitous about you." He replied, "It is better to be
                  sought after than loathed." Thou hast come late, O intoxicating idol! I shall not in
                  a hurry quit my hold on thy skirt: that mistress whom they see but seldom is at last more
                  desired than she is whom they are cloyed with seeing. The charmer that can bring
                  companions along with her has come to quarrel; for she can not be void of jealousy and
                  discontent: Whenever thou comest to visit me attended with comrades or rivals, Though
                    thou comest in peace, yet thy object is hostile. For one single moment that my
                  mistress associated with a rival, it went well-nigh to slay me with jealousy. Smiling, she
                  replied: "O Sadi! I am the torch of the assembly; what is it to me if the moth
                consume itself?"  
              VIII 
              In former times, I recollect, a friend and I were associating together like two kernels
                  within one almond shell. I happened unexpectedly to go on a journey. After some time, when
                  I was returned, he began to chide me, saying: "During this long interval you never
                  sent me a messenger." I replied: "It vexed me to think that the eyes of a
                  courier should be enlightened by your countenance, whilst I was debarred that
                  happiness.---Tell my old charmer not to impose a vow upon me with her tongue; for I would
                  not repent, were she to attempt it with a sword. Envy stings me to the quick, lest another
                  should be satiated with beholding thee, 'till I recollect myself, and say: Nobody can have
                a satiety of that!"  
              IX 
              I saw a learned gentleman the captive of attachment for a certain person, and the
                  victim of his reproach; and he would suffer much violence, and bear it with great
                  patience. On one occasion I said, by way of admonition: "I know that in your
                  attachment for this person you have no bad object, and that this friendship rests not on
                  any criminal design; yet, under this interpretation, it accords not with the dignity of
                  the learned to expose yourself to calumny, and put up with the rudeness of the
                  rabble." He replied: "O my friend, withdraw the hand of reproach from the skirt
                  of my fatality, for I have frequently reflected on this advice which you offer me, and
                  find it easier to suffer contumely on his account than to forego his company; and
                  philosophers have said: 'It is less arduous to persist in the labor of courting than to
                  restrain the eye from contemplating a beloved object.'---Whoever devotes his heart to a
                  soul deluder puts his beard of reputation into the hands of another. That person, without
                  whom thou canst not exist, if he do thee a violence, thou must bear it. The antelope, that
                  is led by a string, can not bound from this side to that. One day I asked a compact of my
                  mistress; how often have I since that day craved her forgiveness! A lover exacts not terms
                  of his charmer; I relinquished my heart to whatever she desired me, whether to call me up
                  to her with kindness, or drive me from her with harshness she knows best, or it is her
                pleasure."  
              X 
              In my early youth such an event (as you know) will come to pass. I held a mystery and
                  intercourse with a young person, because he had a pipe of exquisite melody, and a form
                  silver bright as the full moon.--- "He is sipping the fountain of immortality, who
                  may taste the down of his cheek; and he is eating a sweetmeat, who can fancy the sugar of
                  his lips." It happened that something in his behavior having displeased me, I
                  withdrew the skirt of communication, and removed the seal of my affection from him, and
                  said: "Go, and take what course best suits thee; thou regard not my counsel, follow
                  thine own." I overheard him as he was going, and saying: "If the bat does not
                  relish the company of the sun, the all-current brilliancy of that luminary can suffer no
                  diminution." He so expressed himself and departed, and his vagabond condition much
                  distressed me: The opportunity of enjoyment was lost, And a man is insensible to the
                  relish of prosperity 'till he has tasted adversity: return and slay me, for to die
                  before thy face were far more pleasant than to survive in thy absence.  
              But, thanksgiving and praise to the Almighty, he did not return 'till after some
                      interval, when that melodious pipe of David was cracked, and that handsome form of Joseph
                      in its wane; when that apple his chin was overgrown with hair, like a quince, and the
                      all-current luster of his charms tarnished. He expected me to fold him in my arms; but I
                      took myself aside and said: "When the down of loveliness flourished on thy cheek,
                      thou drove the lord of thy attractions from thy sight; now thou hast come to court his
                      peace when thy face is thick set with fathahs and zammahs, or the bristles
                      of a beard.---The verdant foliage of thy spring is turned yellow; place not thy kettle on
                      my grate, for its fire is cooled. How long wilt thou display this pomp and vanity; hope
                      thou to regain thy former dominion? Make thy court to such as desire thee, sport thy airs
                      on such as will hire thee.---The verdure of the garden, they have told us, is charming;
                      that person (Sadi) knows it who is relating that story; or, in other words, that the
                      fresh-shooting down on their charmers' cheeks is what the hearts of their admirers chiefly
                      covet.---Thy garden is like a bed of chives: the more thou crop it, the more it will
                      shoot.---Last year thou didst depart smooth as an antelope, today thou art returned
                      bearded like a pard. Sadi admires the fresh-shooting down, not when each hair is stiff as
                      a packing-needle.--Whether thou hast patience with thy beard or weed it from thy face,
                      this happy season of youth must come to a conclusion. Had I the same command of life as
                      thou hast of beard, it should not escape me 'till doomsday." I asked him and said:
                "What has become of the beauty of thy countenance, that a beard has sprung up round
                      the orb of the moon?" He answered: "I know not what has befallen my face, unless
                it has put on black to mourn its departed charms."  
              XII 
              They shut up a parrot in the same cage with a crow. The parrot was affronted at his
                ugly look, and said: "What an odious visage is this, a hideous figure; what an
                accursed appearance, and ungracious demeanor! Would to God, O raven of the desert! We
                  were wide apart as the east is from the west:  
              The serenity of his peaceful day would change into the gloom of night, who on issuing
                  forth in the morning might cross thy aspect. An ill-conditioned wretch like thyself should
                  be thy companion; but where could we find such another in the world?" But what is
                  more strange, the crow was also out of all patience, and vexed to the soul at the society
                  of the parrot. Bewailing his misfortune, he was railing at the revolutions of the skies;
                  and, wringing the hands of chagrin, was lamenting his condition, and saying: "What an
                  unpropitious fate is this; what ill-luck, and untoward fortune! Could they any way suit
                  the dignity of me, who would in my day strut with my fellow-crows along the wall of a
                  garden.---It were durance sufficient for a good and holy man that he should be made the
                  companion of the wicked.---What sin have I committed that my stars in retribution of it
                  have linked me in the chain of companionship, and immured me in the dungeon of calamity,
                  with a conceited blockhead, and good-for-nothing babbler?---Nobody will approach the foot
                  of a wall on which they have painted thy portrait; wert thou to get a residence in
                  paradise, others would go in preference to hell." I have introduced this parable to
                  show that however much learned men despise the ignorant, these are a hundredfold more
                  scornful of the learned.---A zahid, or holy man, fell in company with some
                  wandering minstrels. One of them, a charmer of Balkh, said to him: "If thou art
                  displeased with us, do not look sour, for thou art already sufficiently offensive. ---An
                  assemblage is formed of roses and tulips, and thou art stuck up amidst them like a
                  withered stalk; like an opposing storm, and a chilling winter blast; like a ball of snow,
                or lump of ice."  
              XIII 
              I had an associate, who was for years the companion of my travels, partook of the same
                  bread and salt, and enjoyed the many rights of a confirmed friendship. At last, on some
                  trifling advantage, he gave me cause of umbrage, and our intimacy ceased. And
                  notwithstanding all this, there was a hankering of good-will on both sides; in consequence
                  of which I heard that he was one day reciting in a certain assembly these two couplets of
                  my writings: "When my idol, or mistress, is approaching me with her tantalizing
                    smiles, She is sprinkling more salt upon my smarting sores. How fortunate were the tips of
                    her ringlets to come into my hand, Like the sleeve of the generous in the hands of
                    dervishes." This society of his friends bore testimony, and gave applause, not to
                  the beauty of this sentiment, but to the liberality of his own disposition in quoting it;
                  while he had himself been extravagant in his encomiums, regretted the demise of our former
                  attachment, and confessed how much he was to blame. I was made aware that he too was
                  desirous of a reconciliation; and, having sent him these couplets, made my peace.---
                "Was there not a treaty of good faith between us, and didst not thou commence
                  hostilities, and violate the compact? I relinquished all manner of society, and plighted
                  my heart to thee; for I did not suspect that thou wouldst have so readily changed. If it
                still be thy wish to renew our peace, return, and be more dear to me than ever."  
              XIV 
              A man had a beautiful wife, who died; but the mother, a decrepit old dotard, remained a
                  fixture in his house, because of the dowry. He was teased to death by her company; but,
                  from the circumstance of the dowry, he had no remedy. In the meantime some of his friends
                  having come to comfort him, one of them asked: "How is it with you, since the loss of
                  that dear friend?" He answered: "The absence of my wife is not so intolerable as
                  the presence of her mother.---They plucked the rose, and left me the thorn; they plundered
                  the treasure, and let the snake remain. To have one eye pierced with a spear were more
                  tolerable than to see the face of an enemy. It were better to break with a thousand
                friends than to put up with one rival."  
              XV 
              In my youth I recollect I was passing through a street, and caught a glimpse of a
                  moon-like charmer during the dog-days, when their heat was drying up the moisture of the
                  mouth, and the samum, or desert hot-wind, melting the marrow of the bones. From the
                  weakness of human nature I was unable to withstand the darting rays of a noon-tide sun,
                  and took refuge under the shadow of a wall, hopeful that somebody would relieve me from
                  the oppressive heat of summer, and quench the fire of my thirst with a draught of water.
                  All at once I beheld a luminary in the shadowed portico of a mansion, so splendid an
                  object that the tongue of eloquence falls short in summing up its loveliness; such as the
                  day dawning upon a dark night, or the fountain of immortality issuing from chaos. She held
                  in her hand a goblet of snow-cooled water, into which she dropped some sugar, and tempered
                  it with spirit of wine; but I know not whether she scented it with attar, or sprinkled it
                  with a few blossoms from her own rosy cheeks. In short, I received the beverage from her
                  idol-fair hand; and, having drunk it off, found myself restored to a new life. "Such
                    is not my parching thirst that it is to be quenched With the limpid element of water, were
                    I to swallow it in oceans." Joy to that happy aspect whose eye can every morning
                  contemplate such a countenance as thine. A person intoxicated with wine lies giddy and
                  awake half the night; but if intoxicated with the cupbearer (God), the day of judgment
                must be his dawn or morning."  
              XVI 
              In the year that Sultan Mohammed Khowarazm-Shah had for some political reason chosen to
                  make peace with the Wing of Khota, I entered the metropolitan mosque at Kashghar, and met
                  a youth incomparably lovely, and exquisitely handsome; such as they have mentioned in
                  resemblance of him: "Thy master instructed thee in every bold and captivating grace;
                  he taught thee coquetry and confidence, tyranny and violence." I have seen no mortal
                  with such a form and temper, stateliness and manner; perhaps he learned these fascinating
                  ways from an angel. He held the introduction of the Zamakhshari Arabic grammar in his
                  hand, and was repeating:--- "Zaraba Zaidun Amranwa--Zaid beat Amru and is the
                  assailant of Amru." I said: "O my son! the Khowarazm and Khatayi sovereigns have
                  made peace, and does war thus subsist between Zaid and Amru?" He smiled, and asked me
                  the place of my nativity. I answered: "The territory of Shiraz." He said:
                "Do you recollect any of Sadi's compositions?" I replied: "I am enamored
                    with the reader of the syntax, Who, taking offense, assails me in like manner as Zaid does
                    Amru. And Zaid, when read Zaidin, can not raise his head; And how canst thou give a zammah
                    to a word accented with a kasrah?" He reflected a little within himself, and
                  said: "In these parts we have much of Sadi's compositions in the Persian language; if
                  you will speak in that dialect we shall more readily comprehend you, for 'You should
                    address mankind according to their capacities.'" I replied: "Whilst thy
                  passion was that of studying grammar, all trace of reason was erased from our hearts. Yes!
                  the lover's heart is fallen a prey to thy snare: we are occupied about thee, and thou art
                  taken up with Amru and Zaid." On the morrow, which had been fixed on as the period of
                  our stay, some of my fellow-travelers had perhaps told him such a one is Sadi; for I saw
                  that he came running up, and expressed his affection and regret, saying: "Why did you
                  not during all this time tell us that a certain person is Sadi, that I might have shown my
                  gratitude by offering my service to your reverence?" I answered: "In thy
                  presence I can not even say that I am I!" ---He said: "How good it were if you
                  would tarry here for a few days, that we might devote ourselves to your service." I
                  replied: "That can not be, as this adventure will explain to you.---In the hilly
                  region I saw a great and holy man, who was content in living retired from the world in a
                  cavern. I said: 'Why dost thou not come into the city, that thy heart might be relieved
                  from a load of servitude?' He replied: 'In it there dwell some wonderful and angel-faced
                  charmers, and where the path is miry, elephants may find it slippery.'---Having delivered
                  this speech, we kissed each other's head and face, and took our leaves.---What profits it
                  to kiss our mistress's cheek, and with the same breath to bid her adieu? Thou mightest say
                  that the apple had taken leave of its friends by having this cheek red and that cheek
                  yellow: "Were I not to die of grief on that day I say farewell, Thou wouldst
                  charge me with being insincere in my attachments." 
              XVII 
              A ragged dervish accompanied us along with the caravan for Hijaz, and a certain Arab
                  prince presented him with a hundred dinars for the support of his family. Suddenly a gang
                  of Khafachah robbers attacked the caravan, and completely stripped it. The merchants set
                  up a weeping and wailing, and made much useless lamentation and complaint.
                  ---"Whether thou supplicates them, or whether thou complains, the robbers will not
                  return thee their plunder":--- all but that ragged wretch, who stood collected within
                  himself, and unmoved by this adventure. I said: "Perhaps they did not plunder you of
                  that money?" He replied: "Yes, they took it; but I was not so fond of my pet as
                  to break my heart at parting with it. We should not fix our heart so on any thing or being
                  as to find any difficulty in removing it." I said: "What you have remarked
                  corresponds precisely with what once befell myself; for in my juvenile days I took a
                  liking to a young man, and so sincere was my attachment that the Kaaba, or fane, of my eye
                  was his perfect beauty, and the profit of this life's traffic his much-coveted
                  society.---Perhaps the angels might in paradise, otherwise no living form can on this
                  earth display such a loveliness of person. By friendship I swear that after his demise all
                loving intercourse is forbidden; for no human emanation can stand a comparison with him.  
              "All at once the foot of his existence stumbled at the grave of annihilation; and
                the sigh of separation burst from the dwelling of his family. For many days I sat a
                fixture at his tomb, and, of the many dirges I composed upon his demise, this is one: "On
                  that day, when thy foot was pierced with the thorn of death, Would to God the hand of fate
                  had cloven my head with the sword of destruction, That my eyes might not this day have
                  witnessed the world without thee. Such am I, seated at the head of thy dust, As the ashes
                  are seated on my own: Whoever could not take his rest and sleep 'till they first had
                  spread a bed of roses and narcissuses for him: The whirlwind of the sky has scattered the
                  roses of his cheek, And brambles and thorns are shooting from his grave.' "After
                my separation from him I came to a steady and firm determination that during my remaining
                life I would fold up the carpet of enjoyment, and never re-enter the gay circle of
                society.---Were it not for the dread of its waves, much would be the profits of a voyage
                at sea; were it not for the vexation of the thorn, charming might be the society of the
                rose. Yesterday I was walking stately as a peacock in the garden of enjoyment; today I am
                writhing like a snake from the absence of my mistress."  
              XVIII 
              To a certain king of Arabia they were relating the story of Laila and Mujnun, and his
                  insane state, saying: "Notwithstanding his knowledge and wisdom, he has turned his
                  face toward the desert, and abandoned himself to distraction." The king ordered that
                  they bring him into his presence; and he reproved him, and spoke, saying: "What have
                  you seen unworthy in the noble nature of man that you should assume the manners of a
                  brute, and forsake the enjoyment of human society?" Mujnun wept and answered: "Many
                    of my friends reproach me for my love of her, namely Laila. Alas! that they could one day
                    see her, that my excuse might be manifest for me! Would to God that such as blame me
                  could behold thy face, O thou ravisher of hearts! that at the sight of thee they might,
                  from inadvertency, cut their own fingers instead of the orange in their hands.---Then
                  might the truth of the reality bear testimony against the semblance of fiction, 'what
                    manner of person that was for whose sake you were upbraiding me." The king
                  resolved within himself on viewing in person the charms of Laila, that he might be able to
                  judge what her form could be which had caused all this misery, and ordered her to be
                  produced in his presence. Having searched through the Arab tribes, they discovered and
                  presented her before the king in the courtyard of his seraglio. He viewed her figure, and
                  beheld a person of a tawny complexion and feeble frame of body. She appeared to him in a
                  contemptible light, inasmuch as the lowest menial in his harem, or seraglio, surpassed her
                  in beauty and excelled her in elegance. Mujnun, in his sagacity, penetrated what was
                  passing in the royal mind, and said: 'It would behoove you, O king, to contemplate the
                  charms of Laila through the wicket of a Mujnun's eye, in order that the miracle of such a
                  spectacle might be illustrated to you. Thou canst have no fellow-feeling for my disorder;
                  a companion to suit me must have the self-same malady, that I may sit by him the livelong
                  day repeating my tale; for by rubbing two pieces of dry firewood one upon another they
                  will burn all the brighter: "Had that grove of verdant reeds heard the murmurings
                    of love Which in detail of my mistress's story have passed through my ear, It would
                    somehow have sympathized in my pain. Tell it, O my friends, to such as are ignorant of
                    love; Would ye could be aware of what wrings me to the soul: the anguish of a wound is
                  not known to the hale and sound; we must detail our aches only to a fellow sufferer It
                  were idle to talk of a hornet to him who has never during his life smarted from its sting.
                  'till thy condition may in some sort resemble mine, my state will seem to thee an idle
                  fable. Compare not my pain with that of another man; he holds salt in his hand, but I hold
                it on a wounded limb."  
              XX 
              There was a handsome and well-disposed young man, who was embarked in a vessel with a
                lovely damsel. I have read that, sailing on the mighty deep, they fell together into a
                whirlpool. When the pilot came to offer him assistance, saying: "God forbid that he
                should perish in that distress," he was answering from the midst of that overwhelming
                vortex: "Leave me, and take the hand of my beloved!" The whole world admired him
                for this speech which, as he was expiring, he was heard to make. Learn not the tale of
                love from that faithless wretch who can neglect his beloved when exposed to danger. In
                this manner ended the lives of those lovers. Listen to what has happened, that you may
                understand; for Sadi knows the ways and forms of courtship as well as the Tazi, or modern
                Arabic, is understood at Baghdad. Devote your whole heart to the heart-consoler you have
                chosen (namely, God), and let your eyes be shut to the whole world beside. Were Laila and
                Mujnun to return into life, they might read the history of love in this chapter.  
                
              Chapter VI 
              Of Imbecility And Old Age 
              I 
              In the metropolitan mosque at Damascus I was engaged in a disputation with some learned
                men, when a youth suddenly entered the door, and said: "Does any of you understand
                the Persian language?" They directed him to me, and I answered: "It is
                true." He continued: "An old man of a 
              hundred and fifty years of age is in the agonies of death, and is uttering something in
                the Persian language, which we do not understand. If you will have the goodness to go to
                him you may get rewarded; for he possibly may be dictating his will." When I sat down
                by his bedside I heard him reciting: " I said, I will enjoy myself for a few moments.
                Alas! that my soul took the path of departure. Alas! at the variegated table of life I
                partook of a few mouthfuls, and the fates said, enough!" I explained the
                signification of these lines in Arabic to the Syrians. They were astonished that, at his
                advanced time of life, he should express himself so solicitous about a worldly existence.
                I asked him: "How do you now find yourself?" He replied: "What shall I
                say?---Hast thou never witnessed what torture that man suffers from whose jaw they are
                extracting a tooth? Fancy to thyself how excruciating is his pain from whose precious body
                they are tearing an existence!" I said: "Banish all thoughts of death from your
                mind, and let not doubt undermine your constitution; for the Greek philosophers have
                remarked that although our temperaments are vigorous, that is no proof of a long life; and
                that although our sickness is dangerous, that is no positive sign of immediate
                dissolution. If you will give me leave, I will call in a physician to prescribe some
                medicine that may cure you." He replied: "Alas! alas! The landlord thinks of
                refreshing the paintings of his hall, and the house is tottering to its foundation. The
                physician smites the hands of despair when he sees the aged fallen in pieces like a
                potsherd; the old man bemoans himself in the agony of death while the old attendant nurse
                is anointing him with sandalwood. When the equipoise of the temperament is overset,
                neither amulets nor medicaments can do any good."  
              III 
              In the territory of Diarbekr, or Mesopotamia, I was the guest of an old man, who was
                very rich, and had a handsome son. One night he told a story, saying: "During my
                whole life I never had any child but this boy. And in this valley a certain tree is a
                place of pilgrimage, where people go to supplicate their wants; and many was the night
                that I have besought God at the foot of that tree before he would bestow upon me this
                boy." I have heard that the son was also whispering his companions, and saying:
              "How happy I should be if I could discover the site of that tree, in order that I
                might pray for the death of my father." The gentleman was rejoicing and saying:
              "What a sensible youth is my son!" and the boy was complaining and crying:
              "What a tedious old dotard is my father!" Many years are passing over thy head,
                during which thou didst not visit thy father's tomb. What pious oblation didst thou make
                to the manes of a parent that thou shouldst expect so much from thy son?  
              IV 
              Urged one day by the pride of youthful vanity, I had made a forced march, and in the
                evening found myself exhausted at the bottom of an acclivity. A feeble old man, who had
                deliberately followed the pace of the caravan, came up to me and said: "How come you
                to lie down here? Get up; this is no fit place to rest." I replied: "How can I
                proceed, who have not a foot to stand on?" He said: "Have you not heard what the
                prudent have remarked? 'Going on, and halting, is better than running ahead and breaking
                down! 'Ye who wish to reach the end of your journey, hurry not on; practice my advice, and
                learn deliberation. The Arab horse makes a few stretches at full speed, and is broken
                down; while the camel, at its deliberate pace, travels on night and day, and gets to the
                end of his journey."  
              V 
              An active, merry, cheerful, and sweet-spoken youth was for a length of time in the
                circle of my society, whose heart had never known sorrow, nor his lip ceased from being on
                a smile. An age had passed, during which we had not chanced to meet. When I next saw him
                he had taken to himself a wife, and got a family; and the root of his enjoyment was torn
                up, and the rose of his mirth blasted. I asked him: "How is this?" He replied:
              "Since I became a father of children, I ceased to play the child.---Now thou art old,
                relinquish childishness, and leave it to the young to indulge in play and merriment.
                Expect not the sprightliness of youth from the aged; for the stream that ran by can never
                return. Now that the corn is ripe for the sickle, it rears not its head as when green and
                shooting. The season of youth has slipped through my hands; alas! when I think on those
                heart-exhilarating days! The lion has lost the sturdy grasp of his paw: I must now put up,
                like a lynx, with a bit of cheese. An old woman had stained her gray locks black. I said
                to her: O, my antiquated dame! thy hair I admit thou canst turn dark by art, but thou
                never canst make thy crooked back straight."  
              VI 
              One day, in the perverseness of youth, I spoke with asperity to my mother. Vexed at
                heart, she sat down in a corner, and with tears in her eyes was saying: "You have
                perhaps forgot the days of infancy, that you are speaking to me thus harshly.---How well
                did an old woman observe to her own son, when she saw him powerful as a tiger, and
                formidable as an elephant: 'Could thou call to mind those days of thy infancy when
                helpless thou wouldst cling to this my bosom, thou wouldst not thus assail me with savage
                fury, now thou art a lion-like hero, and I am a poor old woman.'"  
              VII 
              A rich miser had a son who was grievously sick. His well-wishers and friends spoke to
                him, saying: "It were proper that you either read the Qur'an throughout or offer an
                animal in sacrifice, in order that the Most High God may restore him to health."
              After a short reflection within himself he answered, " It is better to read the
                Qur'an, which is ready at hand; and my herds are at a distance." A good and holy man
                heard this and remarked: "He makes choice of the reading part because the Qur'an
                slips glibly over the tongue, but his money is to be wrung from the soul of him. Fie upon
                that readiness to bow the head in prayer; would that the hand of charity could accompany
                it! In bestowing a dinar he will stick like an ass in the mire; but ask him to read the
                Al-hamdi, or first chapter of the Qur'an, and he will recite it a hundred times."  
                
              Chapter VII 
              Of The Impressions Of Education 
              I 
              A certain nobleman had a dunce of a son. He sent him to a learned man, saying:
              "Verily you will give instruction to this youth, peradventure he may become a
                rational being." He continued to give him lessons for some time, but they made no
                impression upon him, when he sent a message to the father, saying: "This son is not
                getting wise, and he has well-nigh made me a fool!" Where the innate capacity is
                good, education may make an impression upon it; but no furbisher knows how to give a
                polish to iron which is of a bad temper. Wash a dog seven times in the ocean, and so long
                as he is wet he is all the filthier. Were they to take the ass of Jesus to Mecca, on his
                return from that pilgrimage he would still be an ass.  
              II 
              A philosopher was exhorting his children and saying: "O emanations of my soul,
                acquire knowledge, as no reliance can be placed on worldly riches and possessions, for
                once you leave home rank is of no use, and gold and silver on a journey are exposed to the
                risk either of thieves plundering them at once, or of the owner wasting them by degrees;
                but knowledge is a perennial spring and ever-during fortune. Were a professional man to
                lose his fortune, he need not feel regret, for his knowledge is of itself a mine of
                wealth. Wherever he may sojourn the learned man will meet respect, and be ushered into the
                upper seat, whilst the ignorant man must put up with offal and suffer want.---If thou
                covet the paternal heritage, acquire thy father's knowledge, for this thy father's wealth
                thou may squander in ten days. After having been in authority, it is hard to obey; after
                having been fondled with caresses, to put up with men's violence.---There once occurred an
                insurrection in Syria, and everybody forsook his former peaceful abode. The sons of
                peasants, who were men of learning, came to be employed as the ministers of kings; and the
                children of noblemen, of bankrupt understandings, went a begging from village to
                village."  
              III 
              A certain learned man was superintending the education of a king's son; and he was
                chastising him without mercy, and reproving him with asperity. The boy, out of all
                patience, complained to the king his father, and laid bare before him his much-bruised
                body. The king was much offended, and sending for the master, said: "You do not treat
                the children of my meanest subject with the harshness and cruelty you do my boy; what do
                you mean by this?" He replied: "To think before they speak, and to deliberate
                before they act, are duties incumbent upon all mankind, and more immediately upon kings;
                because whatever may drop from their hands and tongue, the special deed or word will
                somehow become the subject of public animadversion; whereas any act or remark of the
                commonalty attracts not such notice.---Let a dervish, or poor man, commit a hundred
                indiscretions, and his companions will not notice one out of the hundred; and let a king
                but utter one foolish word, and it will be echoed from kingdom to kingdom: therefore in
                forming the morals of young princes, more pains are to be taken than with the sons of the
                vulgar. Whoever was not taught good manners in his boyhood, fortune will forsake him when
                he becomes a man. Thou may bend the green bough as thou likes; but let it once get dry,
                and it will require heat to straighten it: "Verily thou may bend the tender
                  branch, But it were labor lost to attempt making straight a crooked billet.'" The
                king greatly approved of this ingenious detail, and the wholesome course of discipline of
                the learned doctor; and, bestowing upon him a dress and largess, raised him one step in
                his rank as a nobleman!  
              VI 
              A king gave his son into the charge of a preceptor, and said: "This is your child,
                educate him as you would one of your own." For some years he labored in teaching him,
                but to no good purpose; whilst the sons of the preceptor excelled in eloquence and
                knowledge. The king blamed the learned man, and remonstrated with him, saying: "You
                have violated your trust, and infringed the terms of your engagement." He replied:
              "O king, the education is the same, but their capacities are different!" Though
                silver and gold are extracted from stones, yet it is not in every stone that gold and
                silver are found. The Sohail, or star Canopus, is shedding his rays all over the globe. In
                one place he produces common leather, in another, or in Yemen, that called Adim, or
                perfumed.  
              VII 
              I heard a certain learned senior observing to a disciple: "If the sons of Adam
                were as solicitous after Providence, or God, as they are after their means of sustenance,
                their places in Paradise would surpass those of the angels." God did not overlook
                thee in that state when thou wert a senseless embryo in thy mother's womb. He bestowed
                upon thee a soul, reason, temper, intellect, symmetry, speech, judgment, understanding,
                and reflection. He accommodated thy hands with ten fingers, and suspended two arms from
                thy shoulders. Canst thou now suppose, O good-for-nothing wretch, that he will forget to
                provide thy daily bread?  
              VIII 
              I observed an Arab who was informing his son: "O my child, God will ask thee on
                the day of judgment: What hast thou done in this life? But he will not inquire of thee:
                Whence didst thou derive thy origin?" That is, they (or God) will ask, saying:
              "What are your works?" But he will not question you, saying: "Who is your
                father?" The covering of the Kaaba at Mecca, which the pilgrims kiss from devotion,
                is not prized from its being the fabric of a silk-worm; for a while it associated with a
                venerable friend, and became, in consequence, venerable like him.  
              IX 
              They have related in the books of philosophers that scorpions are not brought forth
                according to the common course of nature, as other animals are, but that they eat their
                way through their mothers' wombs, tear open their bellies and thus make themselves a
                passage into the world; and that the fragments of skin which we find in scorpions' holes
                corroborate this fact. On one occasion I was stating this strange event to a good and
                great man, when he answered: "My heart is bearing testimony to the truth of this
                remark; nor can it be otherwise, for as they have thus behaved toward their parents in
                their youth, so they are approved and beloved in their riper years." On his death-bed
                a father exhorted his son, saying: "O generous youth, keep in mind this maxim:
                'Whoever is ungrateful to his own kindred can not hope that fortune shall befriend
                him.'"  
              X 
              They asked a scorpion: "Why do you not make your appearance during the
                winter?" It answered: "What is my character in the summer that I should come
                abroad also in the winter?"  
              XIII 
              One year a dissension arose among the foot-travelers on a pilgrimage to Mecca, and the
                author (Sadi) was also a pedestrian among them. In truth, we fell head and ears together,
                and accusation and recrimination were bandied from all sides. I overheard a kajawah,
                or gentleman, riding on one side of a camel-litter, observing to his adil, or
                opposite companion: "How strange that the ivory piyadah, or pawns, on reaching
                the top of the shatranj, or chess-board, become fazzin, or queens; that is, they get rank,
                or become better than they were; and the piyadah, or pawns, of the pilgrimage---that is,
                our foot-pilgrims---have crossed the desert and become worse." Say from me to that
                hadji, or pilgrim, the pest of his fellow-pilgrims, that he lacerates the skin of mankind
                by his contention. Thou art not a real pilgrim, but that meek camel is one who is feeding
                on thorns and patient under its burden.  
              XIV 
              A Hindu, or Indian, was teaching the art of playing off fireworks. A philosopher
                observed to him: "This is an unfit sport for you, whose dwelling is made of
                straw." Utter not a word 'till thou know that it is the mirror of what is correct;
                and do not put a question where thou know that the answer must be unfavorable.  
              XV 
              A fellow had a complaint in his eyes, and went to a horse doctor, saying:
              "Prescribe something for me." The doctor of horses applied to his eyes what he
                was in the habit of applying to the eyes of quadrupeds, and the man became blind. They
                carried their complaint before the hakim, or judge. He decreed: "This man has no
                redress, for had he not been an ass he would not have applied to a horse or ass
                doctor!" The moral of this apologue is, that whoever doth employ an inexperienced
                person on an affair of importance, besides being brought to shame, he will incur from the
                wise the imputation of a weak mind. A prudent man, with an enlightened understanding,
                entrusts not affairs of consequence to one of mean capacity. The plaiter of mats,
                notwithstanding he be a weaver, they would not employ in a silk manufactory.  
              XVI 
              A certain great Imaan had a worthy son, and he died. They asked him, saying: "What
                shall we inscribe upon the urn at his tomb?" He replied: "Verses of the holy
                Qur'an are of such superior reverence and dignity that they should not be written in
                places where time might efface, mankind tread upon, or dogs defile them; yet, if an
                epitaph be necessary, let these two couplets suffice: I said:  
                
              "Alas! how grateful it was proving to my heart, So long as the verdure of thy
                existence might flourish in the garden.' He replied: 'O my friend, have patience 'till
                the return of the spring, and thou may again see roses blossoming on my bosom, or shooting
                from my dust.'"  
              XVII 
              A holy man was passing by a wealthy personage's mansion, and saw him with a slave tied
                up by the hands and feet, and giving him chastisement. He said: "O my son! God
                Almighty has made a creature like yourself subject to your command, and has given you a
                superiority over him. Render thanksgiving to the Most High Judge, and deal not with him so
                savagely; lest hereafter, on the day of judgment, he may prove the more worthy of the two,
                and you be put to shame.---Be not so enraged with thy bondsman; torture not his body, nor
                harrow up his heart. Thou might buy him for ten dinars, but hadst not after all the power
                of creating him.---To what length will this authority, pride, and insolence hurry thee;
                there is a Master mightier than thou art. Yes, thou art a lord of slaves and vassals, but
                do not forget thine own lord Paramount-namely, God!" There is a tradition of the
                prophet Mohammed, on whom be blessing, announcing: On the day of resurrection, that will
                be the most mortifying event when the good slave will be taken up to heaven, and the
                wicked master sent down to hell.--- "Upon the bondsman, who is subservient to thy
                command, wreak not thy rage and boundless displeasure. For it must be disgraceful on the
                day of reckoning to find the slave at liberty and the master in bondage."  
                
              Chapter VIII 
              Of The Duties Of Society 
              I 
              Riches are intended for the comfort of life, and not life for the purpose of hoarding
                riches. I asked a wise man, saying: "Who is the fortunate man, and who is the
                unfortunate?" He said: "That man was fortunate who spent and gave away, and that
                man unfortunate who died and left behind.---Pray not for that good-for-nothing man who did
                nothing, for he passed his life in hoarding riches, and did not spend them."  
              II 
              The prophet Moses, on whom be peace, admonished Carum, saying: "Be bounteous in
                like manner as God has been bounteous to thee": but he listened not, and you have
                heard the end of him. Whoever did not an act of charity with his silver and gold
                sacrificed his future prospects on his hoard of gold and silver. If desirous that thou
                shouldst benefit by the wealth of this world, be generous with thy fellow creature, as God
                has been generous with thee. The Arabs say: "Show thy generosity, but make it not
                  obligatory, That the benefit of it may redound to thee": that is, bestow and make
                presents, but do not exact an obligation that the profit of that act may be returned to
                you. Wherever the tree of generosity strikes root it sends forth its boughs, and they
                shoot above the skies. If thou cherishes a hope of enjoying its fruit, by gratitude I
                entreat of thee not to lay a saw upon its trunk. Render thanks to God, that thou wert
                found worthy of his divine grace, that he has not excluded thee from the riches of his
                bounty. Esteem it no obligation that thou art serving the king, but show thy gratitude to
                him, namely God, who has placed thee in this service.  
              III 
              Two persons labored to a vain, and studied to an unprofitable end: he who hoarded
                wealth and did not spend it, and he who acquired knowledge and did not practice
                it.---However much thou art read in theory, if thou hast no practice thou art ignorant. He
                is neither a sage philosopher nor an acute divine, but a beast of burden with a load of
                books. How can that brainless head know or comprehend whether he carries on his back a
                library or bundle of fagots?  
              IV 
              Learning is intended to fortify religious practice, and not to gratify worldly
                traffic.---Whoever prostituted his temperance, piety, and science, gathered his harvest
                into a heap and set fire to it.  
              V 
              An intemperate man of learning is like a blind link-boy: He shows the road to
                others, but sees it not himself: Whoever ventured his life on an unproductive hazard
                gained nothing by the risk, and lost his own stake.  
              VI 
              A kingdom is embellished by the wise, and religion rendered illustrious by the pious.
                Kings stand more in need of the company of the intelligent than the intelligent do of the
                society of kings.---If, O king! thou wilt listen to my advice, in all thy archives thou
                canst not find a wiser maxim than this: entrust thy concerns only to the learned,
                notwithstanding business is not a learned man's concern.  
              VII 
              Three things have no durability without their concomitants: property without trade,
                knowledge without debate, or a sovereignty without government.  
              VIII 
              To compassionate the wicked is to tyrannize over the good; and to pardon the oppressor
                is to deal harshly with the oppressed.---When thou patronizes and succors the base-born
                man, he looks to be made the partner of thy fortune.  
                                             
              IX 
              No reliance can be placed on the friendship of kings, nor vain hope put in the
                melodious voice of boys; for that passes away like a vision, and this vanishes like a
                dream.---Bestow not thy affections upon a mistress who has a thousand lovers; or, if thou
                bestows them upon her, be prepared for a separation.  
              X 
              Reveal not every secret you have to a friend, for how can you tell but that friend may
                hereafter become an enemy? And bring not all the mischief you are able to do upon an
                enemy, for he may one day become your friend. And any private affair that you wish to keep
                secret, do not divulge to anybody; for, though such a person has your confidence, none can
                be so true to your secret as yourself.---Silence is safer than to communicate the thought
                of thy mind to anybody, and to warn him, saying: Do not divulge it, O silly man! confine
                the water at the dam-head, for once it has a vent thou canst not stop it. Thou shouldst
                not utter a word in secret which thou wouldst not have spoken in the face of the public.  
              XI 
              A reduced foe, who offers his submission and courts your amity, can only have in view
                to become a strong enemy, as they have said: "You can not trust the sincerity of
                friends, then what are you to expect from the cajoling of foes?" Whoever despises a
                weak enemy resembles him who neglects a spark of fire.---Today that thou canst quench it,
                put it out; for let fire rise into a flame, and it may consume a whole world. Now that
                thou canst transfix him with thy arrow, permit not thy antagonist to string his bow.  
              XIII 
              Whoever is making a league with their enemies has it in his mind to do his friends an
                ill turn.--- "O wise man! wash thy hands of that friend who is in confederacy with
                thy foes."  
              XIV 
              When irresolute in the dispatch of business, incline to that side which is the least
                offensive.--Answer not with harshness a mild-spoken man, nor force him into war who knocks
                at the gate of peace.  
              XV 
              So long as money can answer, it were wrong in any business to put the life in
                danger---as the Arabs say: "Let the sword decide after stratagem has failed":
                When the hand is balked in every crafty endeavor, it is lawful to lay it upon the hilt of
                the saber.  
              XVI 
              Show no mercy to a subdued foe, for if he recover himself he will show you no
                mercy.---When thou sees thy antagonist in a reduced state, curl not thy whiskers at him in
                contempt for in every bone there is marrow, and within every jacket there is a man.  
              XVII 
              Whoever puts a wicked man to death delivers mankind from his mischief, and the wretch
                himself from God's vengeance.---Beneficence is praiseworthy; yet thou shouldst not
                administer a balsam to the wound of the wicked. Knew he not who took compassion on a
                snake, that it is the pest of the sons of Adam.  
              XVIII 
              It is wrong to follow the advice of an adversary; nevertheless it is right to hear it,
                that you may do the contrary; and this is the essence of good policy.---Sedulously shun
                whatever your foe may recommend, otherwise thou may wring the hands of repentance on thy
                knees. Should he show thee to the right a path straight as an arrow, turn aside from that,
                and take the path to the left.  
              XX 
              Two orders of mankind are the enemies of church and State: the king without clemency,
                and the holy man without learning.---Let not that prince have rule over the State who is
                not himself obedient to the will of God.  
              XXI 
              It behooves a king so to regulate his anger toward his enemies as not to alarm the
                confidence of his friends; for the fire of passion falls first on the angry man; afterward
                its sparks will dart forth toward the foe, and him they may reach, or they may not. It ill
                becomes the children of Adam, formed of dust, to harbor in their heads such pride,
                arrogance, and passion. I can not fancy all this thy warmth and obstinacy to be created
                from earth, but from fire. I went to a holy man in the land of Bailcan, and said:
              "Cleanse me of ignorance by thy instruction!" He replied: "O fakiq,
                or theologician! go and bear things patiently like the earth; or whatever thou hast read
                let it all be buried under the earth."  
              XXII 
              An evil-disposed man is a captive in the hands of an enemy (namely, himself); for
                wherever he may go he can not escape from the grasp of that enemy's vengeance.---Let a
                wicked man ascend up to heaven, that he may escape from the grasp of calamity; even
                thither would the hand of his own evil heart follow him with misfortune.  
              XXIII 
              When you see discord raging among the troops of your enemy, be on your side quiet; but
                if you see them united, think of your own dispersed state.---When thou beholdest war among
                thy foes, go and enjoy peace with thy friends; but if thou find them of one soul and mind,
                string thy bow, and range stones around thy battlements.  
              XXVIII 
              Whoever is counseling a self-sufficient man stands himself in need of a counselor.  
              XXIX 
              Swallow not the wheedling of a rival, nor pay for the sycophancy of a parasite; for
                that has laid the snare of treachery, and this whetted the palate of gluttony. The fool is
                puffed up with his own praise, like a dead body, which on being stretched upon a bier
                shows a momentary corpulency. ---Take heed and listen not to the sycophant's
                blandishments, who expects in return some small compensation; for shouldst thou any day
                disappoint his object he would in like style sum up two hundred of thy defects.  
              XXX 
              'Till some person may show its defects, the speech of the orator will fail of
                correctness.---Be not vain of the eloquence of thy discourse because it has the fool's
                good opinion, and thine own approbation.  
              XXXI 
              Every person thinks his own intellect perfect, and his own child handsome.---A Muslim
                and a Jew were warm in argument to such a degree that I smiled at their subject. The
                Muslim said in wrath: "If this deed of conveyance be not authentic may I, O God, die
                a Jew!" The Jew replied: "On the Pentateuch I swear, if what I say be false, I
                am a Muslim like you!" Were intellect to be annihilated from the face of the earth,
                nobody could be brought to say: "I am ignorant."  
              XXXII 
              Ten people will partake of the same joint of meat, and two dogs will snarl over a whole
                carcass. The greedy man is incontinent with a whole world set before him; the temperate
                man is content with his crust of bread.---A loaf of brown bread may fill an empty stomach,
                but the produce of the whole globe can not satisfy a greedy eye.---My father, when the sun
                of his life was going down, gave me this sage advice, and it set for good, saying:
              "Lust is a fire; refrain from indulging it, and do not involve thyself in the flames
                of hell. Since thou hast not the strength of burning in those flames (as a punishment in
                the next world), pour in this world the water of continence upon this fire---namely,
                lust."  
              XXXIII 
              Whoever does not do good, when he has the means of doing it, will suffer hardship when
                he has not the means.---None is more unlucky than the misanthrope, for on the day of
                adversity he has not a single friend.  
                                             
              XXXIV 
              Life stands on the verge of a single breath; and this world is an existence between two
                nonentities. Such as truck their deen, or religious practice, for worldly pelf are
                asses. They sold Joseph, and what got they by their bargain?---"Did I not covenant
                with you, O ye sons of Adam, that you should not serve Satan; for verily he is your avowed
                enemy."---By the advice of a foe you broke your faith with a friend; behold from whom
                you separated, and with whom you united yourselves.  
              XXXVI 
              Whatever is produced in haste goes hastily to waste.---I have heard that, after a
                process of forty years, they convert the clay of the East into a China porcelain cup. At
                Baghdad they can make a hundred cups in a day, and thou may of course conceive their
                respective value. A chicken walks forth from its shell, and goes in quest of its food; the
                young of man possesses not that instinct of prudence and discrimination. That which was at
                once something comes to nothing; and this surpasses all creatures in dignity and wisdom. A
                piece of crystal or glass is found everywhere, and held of no value; a ruby is obtained
                with difficulty, and therefore inestimable.  
              XXXVII 
              Patience accomplishes its object, while hurry speeds to its ruin.---With my own eyes I
                saw in the desert that the deliberate man outstripped him that had hurried on. The
                wing-footed steed is broken down in his speed, whilst the camel-driver jogs on with his
                beast to the end of his journey.  
              XXXVIII 
              Nothing is so good for an ignorant man as silence, and if he knew this he would no
                longer be ignorant.---When unadorned with the grace of eloquence it is wise to keep watch
                over the tongue in the mouth. The tongue, by abuse, renders a man contemptible; levity in
                a nut is a sign of its being empty. A fool was undertaking the instruction of an ass, and
                had devoted his whole time to this occupation. A wise man said to him: "What art thou
                endeavoring to do? In this vain attempt dread the reproof of the censorious! A brute can
                never learn speech from thee; do thou learn silence from him." That man who reflects
                not before he speaks will only make all the more improper answer. Either like a man
                arrange thy speech with judgment, or like a brute sit silent. 
              XXXIX 
              Whoever shall argue with one more learned than himself that others may take him for a
                wise man, only confirms them in his being a fool.---"When a person superior to what
                thou art engages thee in conversation do not contradict him, though thou may know
                better."  
              XL 
              He can see no good who will associate with the wicked.---Were an angel from heaven to
                associate with a demon, he would learn his brutality, perfidy, and hypocrisy. Virtue thou
                never canst learn of the vicious; it is not the wolf's occupation to mend skins, but to
                tear them.  
              XLI 
              Expose not the secret failings of mankind, otherwise you must verily bring scandal upon
                them and distrust upon yourself.  
              XLII 
              Whoever acquires knowledge and does not practice it resembles him who plows his land
                and leaves it unsown.  
              XLVI 
              It is not every man that has a handsome physical exterior that has a good moral
                character; for the faculty of business or virtue resides in the heart and not in the skin.
                Thou canst in one day ascertain the intellectual faculties of a man, and what proficiency
                he has made in his degrees of knowledge; but be not secure of his mind, nor foolishly
                sure, for it may take years to detect the innate baseness of the heart.  
              XLVII 
              Whoever contends with the great sheds his own blood.---Thou contemplates yourself as a
                mighty great man; and they have truly remarked that the squinter sees double. Thou, who
                canst in play butt with a ram, must soon find thyself with a broken pate.  
                                             
              XLVIII 
              To grapple with a lion, or to box against a naked scimitar, are not the acts of the
                prudent.---Brave not the furious with war and opposition; before their arms of strength
                cross thy hands of submission.  
              XLIX 
              A weak man, who tries his courage against the strong, leagues with the foe to his own
                destruction.--Nurtured in a shade, what strength can he have that he should engage with
                the warlike in battle; impotent of arm, he was falling the victim of folly when he set his
                wrist in opposition to a wrist of iron.  
              L 
              Whoever will not listen to admonition harbors the fancy of hearing reprehension.---When
                advice gains not an admission into the ear, if I give thee reproof, hear it in silence.  
              LI  
              The idle can not endure the industrious any more than the curs of the market-place,
                who, on meeting dogs employed for sporting, will snarl at and prevent them passing.  
              LII 
              A mean wretch, that can not vie with another in virtue, will assail him with
                malignity.---The narrow-minded envier will somehow manage to revile thee, who in thy
                presence might have the tongue of his utterance struck dumb.  
              LV 
              To hold counsel with women is bad, and to deal generously with prodigals a
                fault.---Showing mercy upon the sharp-fanged pard must prove an injustice to the harmless
                sheep.  
              LVI 
              Whoever has his foe at his mercy, and does not kill him, is his own enemy.---With a
                stone in his hand, and the snake's head convenient, a wise man hesitates not in crushing
                it. Certain people have seen this maxim in an opposite point of view, saying: "It
                were wiser to delay the execution of captives, inasmuch as the option is left so that you
                can slay, or you can release them; but if you shall have heedlessly put them to death, the
                policy is defunct, for the opportunity of repairing is lost."--There is no great
                difficulty to separate the soul from the body, but it is not so easy to restore life to
                the dead: prudence dictates patience in giving the arrow flight, for let it quit the bow
                and it never can be recalled.  
              LVII 
              A learned man who has got into an argument with the ignorant can have no hopes of
                supporting his own dignity; and if an ignoramus by his loquacity gets the upper hand it
                should not surprise us, for he is a stone and can bruise a gem. No wonder if his spirit
                flag; the nightingale is cooped up in the same cage with the crow.---If the man of sense
                is coarsely treated by the vulgar, let it not excite our wrath and indignation; if a piece
                of worthless stone can bruise a cup of gold, its worth is not increased, nor that of the
                gold diminished.  
              LX 
              Genius without education is the subject of our regret, and education without genius is
                labor lost. Although embers have a lofty origin (fire being of a noble nature), yet, as
                having no intrinsic worth, they fall upon a level with common dust; on the other hand,
                sugar does not derive its value from the cane, but from its own innate quality.---Inasmuch
                as the disposition of Canaan was bad, his descent from the prophet Noah stood him in no
                stead. Pride thyself on what virtue thou hast, and not on thy parentage; the rose springs
                from a thorn-bush, and Abraham from Azor (either his father's name, or fire).  
              LXI 
              That is musk which discloses itself by its smell, and not what the perfumers impose
                upon us.---If a man be expert in any art he needs not tell it, for his own skill will show
                it.  
              LXII 
              A wise man is like a vase in a druggist's shop, silent, but full of virtues; and the
                ignorant man resembles the drum of the warrior, being full of noise, and an empty
                babbler.---The sincerely devout have remarked that a learned man, beset by the illiterate,
                is like one of the lovely in a circle of the blind, or the holy Qur'an in the dwelling of
                the infidel.  
              LXIII 
              A friend whom they take an age to conciliate, it were wrong all at once to
                alienate.---In a series of years a stone changes into a ruby; take heed, and destroy it
                not at once by dashing it against another stone.  
              LXIV 
              Reason is in like manner enthralled by passion, as an uxorious man is in the hands of
                an artful woman. Thou may shut the door of joy upon that dwelling where thou hearest
                resounding the scolding voice of a woman.  
              LXV 
              Intellect, without firmness, is craft and chicanery; and firmness, without intellect,
                perverseness and obstinacy.---First, prudence, good sense, and discrimination, and then
                dominion; for the dominion and good fortune of the ignorant are the armor of rebellion
                against God.  
              LXVI 
              The sinner who spends and gives away is better than the devotee who begs and lays by.  
              LXVII 
              Whoever foregoes carnal indulgence in order to get the good opinion of mankind, has
                forsaken a lawful passion and involved himself in what is forbidden.---What, wretched
                creature! can that hermit see in his own tarnished mirror, or heart, who retires to a
                cell, but not for the sake of God?  
              LXIX 
              A wise man should not through clemency overlook the insolence of the vulgar, otherwise
                both sustain a loss, for their respect for him is lessened and their own brutality
                confirmed: ---When thou addresses the low with urbanity and kindness, it only adds to
                their pride and arrogance.  
              LXXIV 
              In a season of drought and scarcity ask not the distressed dervish, saying: "How
                are you?" Unless on the condition that you apply a balm to his wound, and supply him
                with the means of subsistence.--The ass which thou sees stuck in the slough with his
                rider, compassionate from thy heart, otherwise do not go near him. Now that thou went and
                asked him how he fell, like a sturdy fellow bind up thy loins, and take his ass by the
                tail.  
              LXXV 
              Two things are repugnant to reason: to expend more than what Providence has allotted
                for us, and to die before our ordained time.---Whether offered up in gratitude, or uttered
                in complaint, destiny can not be altered by a thousand sighs and lamentations. The angel
                who presides over the storehouse of the winds feels no compunction, though he extinguish
                the old woman's lamp.  
              LXXVI 
              O you that are going in quest of food, sit down, that you may have to eat. And, O you
                that death is in quest of, go not on, for you can not carry life along with you.---In
                search of thy daily bread, whether thou exert thyself, or whether thou dost not, the God
                of Majesty and Glory will equally provide it. Wert thou to walk into the mouth of a tiger
                or lion, he could not devour thee, unless by the ordinance of thy destiny.  
              LXXVII 
              Whatever was not designed, the hand can not reach; and whatever was ordained, it can
                attain in any situation. ---Thou hast heard that Alexander got as far as chaos; but after
                all this toil he drank not the water of immortality.  
              LXXVIII 
              The fisherman, unless it be his lot, catches no fish in the Tigris; and the fish,
                unless it be its fate, does not die on the dry land.---The wretched miser is prowling all
                over the world, he in quest of pelf, and death in quest of him.  
              LXXXI 
              The envious man is niggard of the gifts of Providence, and an enemy of the
                innocent.---I met a dry-brained fellow of this sort, tricked forth in the robe of a
                dignified person. I said: "O sir! if thou art unfortunate in having this disposition,
                in what have the fortunate been to blame?---Take heed, and wish not misfortune to the
                misanthrope, for his own ill-conditioned lot is calamity sufficient. What need is there of
                showing ill-will to him, who has such an enemy close at his heels?"  
                                             
              LXXXII 
              A scholar without diligence is a lover without money; a traveler without knowledge is a
                bird without wings; a theorist without practice is a tree without fruit; and a devotee
                without learning is a house without an entrance.  
              LXXXIII 
              The object of sending the Qur'an down from heaven was that mankind might make it a
                manual of morals, and not that they should recite it by sections.  
                                             
              LXXXIV 
              The sincere publican has proceeded on foot; the slothful Pharisee is mounted and gone
                asleep.  
              LXXXV 
              The sinner who humbles himself in prayer is more acceptable than the devotee who is
                puffed up with pride.---The courteous and kind-hearted soldier of fortune is better than
                the misanthropic and learned divine.  
              LXXXVI 
              A learned man without works is a bee without honey. ---Tell that harsh and ungenerous
                hornet: As thou yield no honey, wound not with thy sting.  
              LXXXIX 
              Though a dress presented by the sovereign be honorable, yet is our own tattered garment
                preferable; and though the viands at a great man's table be delicate, yet is our own
                homely fare more sweet. ---A salad and vinegar, the produce of our own industry, are
                sweeter than the lamb and bread sauce at the table of our village chief.  
              XC 
              It is contrary to sound judgment, and repugnant to the maxims of the prudent, to take a
                medicine on conjecture, or to follow a road but in the track of a caravan.  
              XCI 
              They asked Imaan Mursheed Mohammed-bin-Mohammed Ghazali, on whom be God's mercy, how he
                had reached such a pitch of knowledge. He replied: "Whatever I was ignorant of
                myself, I felt no shame in asking of others."---Thy prospect of health conforms with
                reason, when thy pulse is in charge of a skilled physician. Ask whatever thou know not;
                for the condescension of inquiring is a guide on thy road in the excellence of learning.  
              XCII 
              Anything you foresee that you may somehow come to know, be not hasty in questioning,
                lest your consequence and respectability may suffer.---When Lokman perceived that in the
                hands of David iron was miraculously molded like was, he asked him not, How didst thou do
                it? for he was aware that he should know it, through his own wisdom, without asking.  
              XCIII 
              It is one of the laws of good breeding that you should forego an engagement or
                accommodate yourself to the master of the entertainment.---If thou know that the
                inclination is reciprocal, accommodate thy story to the temper of the hearer Any discreet
                man that was in Mujnun's company would entertain him only with encomiums on Laila.  
              XCVIII 
              To tell a falsehood is like the cut of a saber; for though the wound may heal, the scar
                of it will remain. In like manner as the brothers of the blessed Joseph, who, being
                notorious for a lie, had no credit afterward when they spoke the truth: God on high has
                said---Jacob is supposed to speak--(Qur'an xii. Sale ii. 35): "Nay, but rather ye
                have contrived this to gratify your own passion; yet it behooves me to be
                patient."---If a man who is in the habit of speaking truth lets a mistake escape him,
                we can overlook it; but if he be notorious for uttering falsehoods, and tell a truth, thou
                wilt call it a lie.  
              XCIX 
              The noblest of creatures is man, and the vilest of animals is no doubt a dog; yet, in
                the concurring opinion of the wise, a dog, thankful for his food, is more worthy than a
                human being who is void of gratitude.---A dog will never forget the crumb thou gavest him,
                though thou may afterward throw a hundred stones at his head; but foster with thy kindness
                a low man for an age, and on the smallest provocation he will be up against thee in arms.  
                                             
              CI 
              It is written in the Injeel, or Gospel, stating: "O son of man, if I bestow riches
                upon you you will be more intent upon your property than upon me, and if I leave you in
                poverty you will sit down dejected; how then can you feel a relish to praise, or a zeal to
                worship me?" (Proverbs xxx. 7, 8, 9).-----In the day of plenty thou art proud and
                negligent; in the time of want, full of sorrow and dejected; since in prosperity and
                adversity such is thy condition, it were difficult to state when thou wouldst voluntarily
                do thy duty.  
              CII 
              The pleasure of Him, or God, who has no equal, hurls one man from a throne of
                sovereignty, and another he preserves in a fish's belly.---Happy proceeds his time who is
                enraptured with thy praise, though, like Jonah, he even may pass it in the belly of a
                fish!  
              CIII 
              Were the Almighty to unsheathe the sword of his wrath, prophets and patriarchs would
                draw in their heads; and were he to deign a glimpse of his benevolence, it would reach the
                wicked along with the good.---Were he on the day of judgment to call us to a strict
                account, even the prophets would have no room for excuse. Say, withdraw the veil from the
                face of thy compassion, that sinners may entertain hopes of pardon.  
              CIV 
              Whoever is not to be brought into the path of righteousness by the punishments of this
                life shall be overtaken with the punishments of that to come: "Verily, I will cause
                them to taste the lesser punishment over and above the greater punishment" (Qur'an
                xxxii. Sale ii. 258).---Princes, in chastising, admonish, and then confine; when they
                admonish, and thou listen not, they throw thee into prison.  
              CV 
              Men of auspicious fortune would rather take warning from the precepts and examples of
                their predecessors than that the rising generation should take warning from their
                acts.---The bird will not approach the grain that is spread about, where it sees another
                bird a captive in the snare. Take warning by the mischance of others, that others may not
                take warning by thine.  
              CVI 
              How can he help himself who was born deaf, if he can not hear; and what can he do whose
                thread of fortune is dragging him on that he may not proceed?---The dark night of such as
                are beloved of God is serene and light as the bright day; but this good fortune results
                not from thine own strength of arm, 'till God in his mercy deign to bestow it. To whom
                shall I complain of thee? for there is no judge else, nor is any arm mightier than thine.
                Him whom thou directs none can lead astray, and him whom thou bewilders none can direct
                upon his way.  
              CVII 
              The beggar whose end is good is better off than the king whose end is evil.---That
                sorrow which is the harbinger of joy is preferable to the joy which is followed by sorrow.  
              CVIII 
              The sky enriches the earth with rain, and the earth gives it dust in return. As the
                Arabs say: "What the vessels have, that they give."---If my moral character
                strike thee as improper, do not renounce thine own good character.  
              CIX 
              The Most High God discerns and hides what is improper; my neighbor sees not, and is
                loud in his clamor.---God preserve us! if man knew what is hidden, none could be safe from
                the animadversion of his neighbor.  
              CX 
              Gold is got from the mine by digging into the earth; and from the grasp of the miser by
                taking away his life.---Misers spend not, but watch with solicitude: expectation, they
                say, is preferable to waste. Next day observe to the joy of their enemies, the gold
                remains, and they are dead without the enjoyment of that hope.  
                                             
              CXI 
              Such as deal hard with the weak will suffer from the exertion of the strong.---It is
                not every arm in which there is strength that can wrench the hand of a weak man. Bring not
                affliction upon the hearts of the feeble, lest thou may fall under the lash of the strong. 
              CXII  
              A wise man, where he meets opposition, labors to get through it, and where he finds
                quiet he drops his anchor, for there safety is on one side, and here enjoyment in the
                middle of it.  
              CXIII 
              The gamester wants three sixes, but he throws only three aces.---The pasture meadow is
                a thousand times richer than the common, but the horse has not his tether at command.  
              CXIV 
              The dervish in his prayer is saying: "O God, have compassion on the wicked, for to
                the good thou hast been abundantly kind, inasmuch as thou hast made them virtuous."  
              CXV 
              Jemshid was the first person who put an edging round his garment, and a ring upon his
                finger. They asked him: "Why did you bestow all the decoration and ornament on the
                left hand, whilst the right is the superior?" He answered: "Sufficient for the
                right is the ornament of being right." Feridun commanded the gilders of China that
                they would inscribe upon the front of his palace: "Strive, O wise man, to make the
                wicked good, for the good are of themselves great and fortunate." 
              CXVI 
              They said to a great and holy man: "Notwithstanding the superiority that the right
                hand commands, why do they wear the ring on the left hand?" He replied: "Are you
                not aware that the best are most neglected! "He who casts our horoscope, provision,
                and fortune, bestows upon us either good luck or wisdom."  
              CXVII 
              It is proper for him to offer counsel to kings who dreads not to lose his head, nor
                looks for a reward.---Whether thou strew heaps of gold at his feet, or brandishes an
                Indian sword over the Unitarian's head, to hope or fear he is alike indifferent; and in
                this the divine unity alone he is resolved and firm.  
              CXVIII 
              It belongs to the king to displace extortioners, to the superintendent of the police to
                guard against murderers, and to the cazi to decide in quarrels and disputes. No two
                complainants ever referred to the cazi content to abide by justice. When thou know that in
                right the claim is just, better pay with a grace than by distress and force. If a man is
                refractory in discharging his revenue, the collector must necessarily coerce him to pay
                it.  
              CXIX 
              Every man's teeth are blunted by acids excepting the cazi's, and they require
                sweets.---That cazi, or judge, that can accept of five cucumbers as a bribe will confirm
                thee in a right to ten fields of melons.  
              CXXI 
              They asked a wise man, saying: "Of the many celebrated trees which the Most High
                God has created lofty and umbrageous, they call none azad, or free, excepting the
                cypress, which bears no fruit; what mystery is there in this ?" He replied:
              "Each has its appropriate produce and appointed season, during the continuance of
                which it is fresh and blooming, and during their absence dry and withered; to neither of
                which states is the cypress exposed, being always flourishing; and of this nature are the
                a:zads, or religious independents. Fix not thy heart on what is transitory; for the
                Dijlah, or Tigris, will continue to flow through Baghdad after the race of Caliphs is
                extinct. If thy hand has plenty, be liberal as the date-tree; but if it affords nothing to
                give away, be an azad, or free man, like the cypress.  
              CXXII 
              Two orders of mankind died, and carried with them regret: such as had and did not
                spend, and such as knew and did not practice. ---None can see that wretched mortal a miser
                who will not endeavor to point out his faults; but were the generous man to have a hundred
                defects, his liberality would cover all his blemishes.  
                
              Colophon 
              The book of the "Gulistan, or Flower-Garden," was completed through the
                assistance and grace of God. Throughout the whole of this work I have not followed the
                custom of writers by inserting verses of poetry borrowed from former authors: "It is
                more decorous to wear our own patched and old cloak than to ask in loan another man's
                garment." Most of these sayings have a dash of hilarity and an odor of gaiety about
                them, in consequence of which short-sighted critics extend the tongue of animadversion,
                saying: "It is not the occupation of sensible men to solicit marrow from a shriveled
                brain, or to digest the smoke of a profitless lamp." Nevertheless it can not be
                concealed from the enlightened judgment of the holy and good, to whom these discourses are
                specially addressed, that the pearls of salutary admonition are threaded on the cord of an
                elegance of language, and the bitter potion of instruction sweetened with the honey of
                facetiousness, that the taste of the reader may not take disgust, and himself be debarred
                from the pleasure of approving of them: "On our part we offered some good advice, and
                spent an age in bringing it to perfection. If that should not meet the ear of anybody's
                good-will, prophets deliver their messages, or warn mankind; and that is enough."  
              O thou who peruses this book, ask the mercy of God on the author of it: his forgiveness
                on the transcriber. Petition for whatever charitable gift thou may require for thyself,
                and implore pardon on the owner. The book is finished through the favor of the Lord God
                Paramount and the bestower of all good!  
             
              Source. 
              From: Charles F. Horne, ed., The Sacred Books and Early Literature of the East,
                (New York: Parke, Austin, & Lipscomb, 1917), Vol. VIII: Medieval Persia, pp.
                227-328.  
              This was a reprint of  
              Saadi. Gulistan; or, Flower-garden,  trans., with an essay, by James
                Ross: and a note upon the translator by Charles Sayle. (London: W. Scott, 1890). 
              And was probably also in 
              Persian literature ... / with a special introduction by Richard  J.H.
                Gottheil ... Rev. ed. (London: The Colonial press, 1900) 
              [On cover of Vol. 1: Persian and Japanese literature. Vol. 2 has imprint: New York, P.F.
              Collier. Vol. 2 issued with Japanese literature. [New York, c1900] Vol. 2 has series: The
              world's greatest literature. Contents: v.1. The Shah Nameh, by Firdusi (Abul Kasim Mansur)
              tr. into English by J. Atkinson. The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam; translation by E.
              FitzGerald. The Divan, by Hafiz; translation by H. Bicknell--v.2. The Gulistan, by Sa'di ;
              translation by J Ross.] 
              Is it possible Ross's version was an improvment on Francis Gladwin's, since Ross was
                also responsible for: 
              Saadi, The Gulistan, or Rose garden. By Musle-Huddeen Sheik Saadi, of Shiraz.
                Tr. from the original by Francis Gladwin. With an essay on Saadi's life and genius, by
                James Ross, and a preface by R. W. Emerson. (Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1865) 
              Scanned by Jerome S. Arkenberg, Cal. State Fullerton. The text has been modernized by
                Prof. Arkenberg. 
             
              This text is part of the Internet
                Medieval Source Book. The Sourcebook is a collection of public domain and
                copy-permitted texts related to medieval and Byzantine history.  
              Unless otherwise indicated the specific electronic form of the document is copyright.
                Permission is granted for electronic copying, distribution in print form for educational
                purposes and personal use. If you do reduplicate the document, indicate the source. No
                permission is granted for commercial use.  
              © Paul Halsall, September 1998  
              halsall@murray.fordham.edu  
            Sa'di (1184-1292):  
            The Gulistan, c. 1256 CE
           
          
                       
          This translation of the Gulistan, from the Sacred Books of the East series,
                is by a different translator than the one which has been on the net for some time. This version was translated originally by James Ross, as The Gulistan of Sadi, London:
                  1890.  Unfortunately, the other etext does not identify the translator. 
           
            Chapter I 
              Of The Customs of Kings 
              I 
              I have heard of a king who made the sign to put a captive to death. The poor wretch, in
              that state of desperation, began to abuse the king in the dialect which he spoke, and to
              revile him with asperity, as has been said; whoever shall wash his hands of life will
              utter whatever he may harbor in his heart:  
                                           
              "When a man is desperate he will give a latitude to his tongue, Like as a cat
                at bay will fly at a dog"  
              ---- "at the moment of compulsion when it is impossible to fly, the hand will
              grasp the sharp edge of a sword." The king asked, saying, "What does he
              say?" One of the Viziers (or nobles in attendance), and a well-disposed man, made
              answer, "O my lord! he is expressing himself and saying, "Paradise is for
                such as are restraining their anger And forgiving their fellow-creatures; and God will
                befriend the benevolent."  
              The king felt compassion for him, and desisted from shedding his blood. Another
              nobleman, and the rival of that former, said, "It is indecorous for such peers, as we
              are, to use any language but that of truth in the presence of kings; this man abused his
              majesty, and spoke what was unworthy of him." The king turned away indignant at this
              remark, and replied, "I was better pleased with his falsehood than with this truth
              that you have told; for that bore the face of good policy, and this was founded in
              malignity; and the intelligent have said, 'A peace-mingling falsehood is preferable to a
              mischief stirring truth': Whatever prince may do that which he (his counselor) will
              recommend, it must be a subject of regret if he shall advise aught but good."  
              They had written over the portico of King Feridun's palace: "This world, O
              brother! abides with none. Set thy heart upon its maker, and let him suffice thee. Rest
              not thy pillow and support on a worldly domain which has fostered and slain many such as
              thou art. Since the precious soul must resolve on going, what matters it whether it
              departs from a throne or the ground?"  
              II 
              One of the kings of Khorassan saw, in a dream, Sultan Mahmud, the son of Saboktagin, a
                  hundred years after his death, when his body was decayed and fallen into dust, all but his
                  eyes, which as heretofore were moving in their sockets and looking about them. All the
                  learned were at a stand for its interpretation, excepting one dervish, who made his
                  obeisance, and said: "He is still looking about him, because his kingdom and wealth
                  are possessed by others!---Many are the heroes whom they have buried under ground, of
                  whose existence above it not one vestige is left; and of that old carcass which they
                  committed to the earth, the earth has so consumed it that not one bone is left. Though
                  many ages are gone since Nushirowan was in being, yet in the remembrance of his
                  munificence is his fair renown left. Be generous, O my friend! and avail thyself of life,
                before they proclaim it as an event that such a person is not left."  
              III 
              I have heard of a king's son who was short and mean, and his other brothers were lofty
                in stature and handsome. On one occasion the king, his father, looked at him with
                disparagement and scorn. The son, in his sagacity, understood him and said, "O
                father! a short wise man is preferable to a tall blockhead; it is not everything that is
                mightier in stature that is superior in value: "A sheep's flesh is wholesome, that
                  of an elephant carrion. Of the mountains of this earth Sinai is one of the least, Yet is
                  it most mighty before God in state and dignity. Heard thou not what an intelligent
                lean man said one day to a sleek fat dolt? An Arab horse, notwithstanding his slim make,
                is more prized thus than a herd of asses."  
              The father smiled; the pillars of the State, or courtiers nodded their assent, and the
                  other brothers were mortified to the quick. 'Till a man has declared his mind, his virtue
                  and vice may have lain hidden; do not conclude that the thicket is unoccupied,
                peradventure the tiger is gone asleep!  
              I have heard that about that time a formidable antagonist appeared against the king.
                  Now that an army was levied in each side, the first person that mounted his horse and
                  sallied upon the plain was that son, and he exclaimed: "I can not be that man whose
                  back thou mayest see on the day of battle, but am him thou mayest descry amidst the thick
                  of it, with my head covered with dust and blood; for he that engages in the contest sports
                  with his own blood, but he who flees from it sports with the blood of an army on the day
                  of fight." He so spoke, assaulting the enemy's cavalry, and overthrew some renowned
                  warriors. When he came before the king he kissed the earth of obeisance, and said, "O
                  thou, who didst view my body with scorn, whilst not aware of valor's rough exterior, it is
                  the lean steed that will prove of service, and not the fatted ox, on the day of
                battle."  
              They have reported that the enemy's cavalry was immense, and those of the king few in
                  number; a body of them was inclined to fly, when the youth called aloud, and said,
                "Be resolute, my brave men, that you may not have to wear the apparel of women!"
                The troops were more courageous on this speech, and attacked altogether. I have heard that
                on that day they obtained a complete victory over the enemy. The king kissed his face and
                eyes, and folded him in his arms, and became daily more attached to him, 'till he declared
                him heir-apparent to the throne. The brothers bore him a grudge, and put poison into his
                food. His sister saw this from a window, and closed the shutter; and the boy understood
                the sign, and withdrew his hand from the dish, and said, "It is hard that the
                  virtuous should perish and that the vicious should occupy their places." Were the
                  homayi, or phoenix, to be extinct in the world, none would take refuge under the shadow of
                  an owl. They informed the father of this event; he sent for the brothers and rebuked them,
                  as they deserved. Then he made a division of his domains, and gave a suitable portion to
                  each, that discontent might cease; but the ferment was increased, as they have said: Ten
                  dervishes can sleep on one rug, but two kings can not be accommodated in a whole kingdom.
                  When a man after God's heart can eat the moiety of his loaf, the other moiety he will give
                  in alms to the poor. A king may acquire the sovereignty of one climate or empire; and he
                will in like manner covet the possession of another.  
              IV 
              A horde of Arab robbers had possessed themselves of the fastness of a mountain, and
                  waylaid the track of the caravan. The yeomanry of the villages were frightened at their
                  stratagems, and the king's troops alarmed, inasmuch as they had secured an impregnable
                  fortress on the summit of the mountain, and made this stronghold their retreat and
                dwelling.  
              The superintendents of the adjacent districts consulted together about obviating their
                  mischief, saying: If they are in this way left to improve their fortune, any opposition to
                  them may prove impracticable. The tree that has just taken root, the strength of one man
                  may be able to extract; but leave it to remain thus for a time, and the machinery of a
                  purchase may fail to eradicate it: the leak at the dam head might have been stopped with a
                plug, which now it has a vent we can not ford its current on an elephant.  
              Finally it was determined that they should set a spy over them, and watch an
                  opportunity when they had made a sally upon another tribe, and left their citadel
                  unguarded. Some companies of able warriors and experienced troops were sent, that they
                  might conceal themselves in the recesses of the mountain. At night, when the robbers were
                  returned, jaded with their march and laden with spoil, and had stripped themselves of
                  their armor, and deposited their plunder, the foremost enemy they had to encounter was
                  sleep. Now that the first watch of night was gone: "the disk of the sun was withdrawn
                  into a shade, and Jonas had stepped into the fish's mouth"---the bold-hearted
                  warriors sprang from their ambush and secured the robbers by pinioning them one after
                another.  
              In the morning they presented them at the royal tribunal, and the king gave an order to
                  put the whole to death. There happened to be among them a stripling, the fruit of whose
                  early spring was ripening in its bloom, and the flower-garden of his cheek shooting into
                  blossom. One of the viziers kissed the foot of the imperial throne, and laid the face of
                  intercession on the ground, and said, "This boy has not yet tasted the fruit of the
                  garden of life, nor enjoyed the fragrance of the flowers of youth: such is my confidence
                  in the generous disposition of his Majesty that it will favor a devoted servant by sparing
                  his blood." The king turned his face away from this speech; as it did not accord with
                  his lofty way of thinking, he replied: "The rays of the virtuous can not illuminate
                  such as are radically vicious; to give education to the worthless is like throwing walnuts
                  upon a dome: it were wiser to eradicate the tree of their wickedness, and annihilate their
                  tribe; for to put out a fire and leave the embers, and to kill a viper and foster its
                  young, would not be the acts of rational beings. Though the clouds pour down the water of
                  vegetation, thou canst never gather fruit from a willow twig. Exalt not the fortune of the
                abject, for thou canst never extract sugar from a mat or common cane."  
              The vizier listened to this speech; willingly or not he approved of it, and applauded
                the good sense of the king, and said: "What his majesty, whose dominion is eternal,
                is pleased to remark is the mirror of probity and essence of good policy, for had he been
                brought up in the society of those vagabonds, and confined to their service, he would have
                followed their vicious courses. Your servant, however, trusts that he may be instructed to
                associate with the virtuous, and take to the habits of the prudent; for he is still a
                child, and the lawless and refractory principles of that gang can not have yet tainted his
                mind; and it is in tradition that----Whatever child is born, he is verily born after
                  the right way, namely Islam, Afterward his father and his mother bring him up as a Jew,
                  Christian, or Magi.  
              The wife of Lot associated with the wicked, and her posterity failed in the gift of
                prophecy; the dog of the seven sleepers (at Ephesus) for some time took the path of the
                righteous, and became a rational being."  
              He said this, and a body of the courtiers joined him in intercession, 'till the king
                  acceded to the youth's pardon, and answered: "I gave him up, though I saw not the
                  good of it. Know thou what Zal said to the heroic Rustem: 'Thou must not consider thy foe
                  as abject and helpless. I have often found a small stream at the fountain-head, which,
                when followed up, carried away the camel and its load.'"  
              In short, the vizier took the boy home, and educated him with kindness and liberality.
                  And he appointed him masters and tutors, who taught him the graces of logic and rhetoric,
                  and all manner of courtier accomplishments, so that he met general approbation. On one
                  occasion the vizier was detailing some instances of his proficiency and talents in the
                  royal presence, and saying: "The instruction of the wise has made an impression upon
                  him, and his former savageness is obliterated from his mind." The king smiled at this
                  speech, and replied: "The whelp of a wolf must prove a wolf at last, notwithstanding
                he may be brought up by a man."  
              Two years after this a gang of city vagabonds got about him, and joined in league,
                  'till on an opportunity he murdered the vizier and his two sons; and, carrying off an
                  immense booty, he took up the station of his father in the den of thieves, and became a
                  hardened villain. The king was apprised of this event; and, seizing the hand of amazement
                  with the teeth of regret, said: "How can any person manufacture a tempered saber from
                  base iron; nor can a base-born man, O wiseacre, be made a gentleman by any education!
                  Rain, in the purity of whose nature there is no anomaly, cherishes the tulip in the garden
                  and common weed in the salt-marsh. Waste not thy labor in scattered seed upon a briny
                  soil, for it can never be made to yield spikenard; to confer a favor on the wicked is of a
                like import, as if thou didst an injury to the good."  
              V 
              At the gate of Oghlamish Patan, King of Delhi, I (namely Sadi) saw an officer's son,
                  who, in his wit and learning, wisdom and understanding, surpassed all manner of encomium.
                  In the prime of youth, he at the same time bore on his forehead the traces of ripe age,
                  and exhibited on his cheek the features of good fortune: "Above his head, from his
                prudent conduct, the star of superiority shone conspicuous."  
              In short, it was noticed with approbation by the king that he possessed bodily
                  accomplishments and mental endowments. And sages have remarked that worth rests not on
                  riches, but on talents; and the discretion of age, not in years, but on good sense. His
                  comrades envied his good fortune, charged him with disaffection, and vainly attempted to
                  have him put to death: "but what can the rival effect so long as the charmer is our
                friend?"  
              The king asked, saying, "Why do they show such a disinclination to do you
                  justice?" He replied: "Under the shadow of his majesty's good fortune I have
                  pleased everybody, excepting the envious man, who is not to be satisfied but with a
                  decline of my success; and let the prosperity and dominion of my lord the king be
                  perpetual!" I can so manage as to give umbrage to no man's heart; but what can I do
                  with the envious man, who harbors within himself the cause of his own chagrin? Die, O ye
                  envious, that ye may get a deliverance; for this is such an evil that you can get rid of
                  it only by death. Men soured by misfortune anxiously desire that the state and fortune of
                  the prosperous may decline; if the eye of the bat is not suited for seeing by day, how can
                  the fountain of the sun be to blame? Dost thou require the truth? It were better a
                thousand such eyes should suffer, rather than that the light of the sun were obscured.  
              VI 
              They tell a story of a Persian king who had stretched forth the arm of oppression over
                  the subjects' property, and commenced a system of violence and rapacity to such a degree
                  that the people emigrated to avoid the vexatiousness of his tyranny, and took the road of
                  exile to escape the annoyance of his extortions. Now that the population was diminished
                  and the resources of the State had failed, the treasury remained empty, and enemies
                  gathered strength on all sides. Whoever may expect a comforter on the day of adversity,
                  say, let him practice humanity during the season of prosperity; if not treated cordially,
                  thy devoted slave will forsake thee; show him kindness and affection, and the stranger may
                become the slave of thy devotion.  
              One day they were reading, in his presence, from the Shah-Nameh, of the tyrant Zollak's
                  declining dominion and the success of Feridun. The vizier asked the king, saying:
                "Can you so far comprehend that Feridun had no revenue, domain, or army, and how the
                  kingdom came to be confirmed with him?" He answered: "As you have heard, a body
                  of people collected about him from attachment, and gave their assistance 'till he acquired
                  a kingdom." The vizier said: "Since, O sire, a gathering of the people is the
                  means of forming a kingdom, how come you in fact to cause their dispersion unless it be
                  that you covet not a sovereignty? So far were good that thou wouldst patronize the army
                  with all thy heart, for a king with an army constitutes a principality." The king
                  asked: "What are the best means of collecting an army and yeomanry?" He replied:
                "Munificence is the duty of a king, that the people may assemble around him, and
                  clemency, that they may rest secure under the asylum of his dominion and fortune, neither
                of which you have. A tyrant can not govern a kingdom, for the duty  
              of a shepherd is not expected from the wolf. A king that can anyhow be accessory to
                tyranny will undermine the wall of his own sovereignty."  
              The advice of the prudent minister did not accord with the disposition of the king. He
                  ordered him to be confined, and immured him in a dungeon. It soon came to pass that the
                  sons of the king's uncle rose in opposition, levied an army in support of their
                  pretensions, and claimed the sovereignty of their father. A host of the people who had
                  cruelly suffered under the arm of his extortion and were dispersed, gathered around and
                  succored them 'till they dispossessed him of his kingdom and established them in his
                  stead. That king who can approve of tyrannizing over the weak will find his friend a
                  bitter foe in the day of hardship. Deal fairly with thy subjects, and rest easy about the
                warfare of thine enemies, for with an upright prince his yeomanry is an army.  
              IX 
              In his old age an Arab king was grievously sick, and had no hopes of recovery, when lo!
                  a messenger on horseback presented himself at the palace-gate, and joyfully announced,
                  saying: "Under his majesty's good fortune we have taken such a stronghold, made the
                  enemy prisoners of war, and reduced all the landholders and vassals of that quarter to
                  obedience as subjects." On hearing this news the king fetched a cold sigh, and
                  answered: "These glad tidings are not intended for me but for my rivals, namely, the
                  heirs of the sovereignty. My precious life has, alas! been wasted in the hope that what my
                  heart chiefly coveted might enter at my gate. My bounden hope was gratified; yet what do I
                  benefit by that? There is no hope that my passed life can return. The hand of death beats
                  the drum of departure. Yes, my two eyes, you must bid adieu to my head. Yes, palm of my
                  hand, wrist, and arm, all of you say farewell, and each take leave of the other. Death has
                  overtaken me to the gratification of my foes; and you, O my friends, must at last be
                  going. My days were blazed away in folly; what I did not do let you take warning and
                do." 
              X 
              At the metropolitan mosque of Damascus I was one year fervent in prayer over the tomb
                  of Yahiya, or John the Baptist and prophet, on whom be God's blessing, when one of the
                  Arab princes, who was notorious for his injustice, chanced to arrive on a pilgrimage, and
                  he put up his supplication, asked a benediction, and craved his wants.---The rich and poor
                  are equally the devoted slaves of this shrine, and the richer they are the more they stand
                  in need of succor. Then he spoke to me, saying: "In conformity with the generous
                  resolution of dervishes and their sincere zeal, you will, I trust, unite with me in
                  prayer, for I have much to fear from a powerful enemy." I answered him, "Have
                  compassion on your own weak subjects, that you may not see disquiet from a strong foe.
                  With a mighty arm and heavy hand it is dastardly to wrench the wrists of poor and
                  helpless. Is he not afraid who is hard-hearted with the fallen that if he slip his foot
                  nobody will take him by the hand?--- Whoever sowed the seed of vice and expected a
                  virtuous produce, pampered a vain brain and encouraged an idle whim. Take the cotton from
                  thy ear and do mankind justice, for if thou refuse them justice there is a day of
                  retribution. The sons of Adam are members one of another, for in their creation they have
                  a common origin. If the vicissitudes of fortune involve one member in pain, all the other
                  members will feel a sympathy. Thou, who art indifferent to other men's affliction, if they
                call thee a man art unworthy of the name."  
              XI 
              A dervish, whose prayers had a ready acceptance with God, made his appearance at
                  Baghdad. Hojaj Yusuf (a great tyrant) sent for him and said: "Put up a good prayer
                  for me." He prayed, "O God! take from him his life!" Hojaj said, "For
                  God's sake, what manner of prayer is this?" He answered: "It is a salutary
                  prayer for you, and for the whole sect of Muslims.---O mighty sir, thou oppressor of the
                  feeble, how long can this violence remain marketable? For what purpose came the
                sovereignty to thee? Thy death were preferable to thy tyrannizing over mankind."  
              XII 
              An unjust king asked a holy man, saying. "What is more excellent than
                  prayers?" He answered: "For you to remain asleep 'till mid-day, that for this
                  one interval you might not afflict mankind."---I saw a tyrant lying dormant at noon,
                  and said, "This is mischief, and is best lulled to sleep. It were better that such a
                reprobate were dead whose state of sleep is preferable to his being awake."  
              XIV 
              One of the ancient kings was easy with the yeomanry in collecting his revenue, but hard
                  on the soldiery in his issue of pay; and when a formidable enemy showed its face, these
                  all turned their backs. Whenever the king is remiss in paying his troops, the troops will
                  relax in handling their arms. What bravery can be displayed in the ranks of battle whose
                hand is destitute of the means of living?  
              One of those who had excused themselves was in some sort my intimate. I reproached him
                  and said, "He is base and ungrateful, mean and disreputable who, on a trifling change
                  of circumstances, can desert his old master and forget his obligation of many years'
                  employment." He replied: "Were I to speak out, I swear by generosity you would
                  excuse me. Peradventure, my horse was without corn, and the housings of his saddle in
                  pawn.---And the prince who, through parsimony, withholds his army's pay can not expect it
                  to enter heartily upon his service."---Give money to the gallant soldier that he may
                  be zealous in thy cause, for if he is stinted of his due he will go abroad for service. So
                    long as a warrior is replenished with food he will fight valiantly, And when his belly is
                  empty he will run away sturdily. 
              XV 
              One of the viziers was displaced, and withdrew into a fraternity of dervishes, whose
                  blessed society made its impression upon him and afforded consolation to his mind. The
                  king was again favorably disposed toward him, and offered his reinstatement in office; but
                  he consented not, and said, "With the wise it is deemed preferable to be out of
                  office than to remain in place.---Such as sat within the cell of retirement blunted the
                  teeth of dogs, and shut the mouths of mankind; they destroyed their writings, and broke
                  their writing reeds, and escaped the lash and venom of the critics."---The king
                  answered: "At all events I require a prudent and able man, who is capable of managing
                  the State affairs of my kingdom." The ex-minister said: "The criterion, O sire,
                  of a wise and competent man is that he will not meddle with such like matters.---The homayi,
                  or phoenix, is honored above all other birds because it feeds on bones, and injures no
                living creature."  
              A Tamsil, or application in point.---They asked a Siyah-gosh, or lion-provider,
                "Why do you choose the service of the lion?" He answered: "Because I
                  subsist on the leavings of his prey, and am secure from the ill-will of my enemies under
                  the asylum of his valor." They said: "Now you have got within the shadow of his
                  protection and admit a grateful sense of his bounty, why do you not approach more closely,
                  that he may include you within the circle of select courtiers and number you among his
                  chosen servants?" He replied, "I should not thus be safe from his
                  violence."---Though a Gueber may keep his fire alight for a hundred years, if he fall
                  once within its flame it will burn him.---It on one occasion may chance that the courtier
                  of the king's presence shall pick up a purse of gold, and the next that he shall lie
                  shorter by the head. And philosophers have remarked, saying, "It is incumbent on us
                  to be constantly aware of the fickle dispositions of kings, who will one moment take
                  offense at a salutation, and at another make an honorary dress the return for an act of
                  rudeness; and they have said, That to be over much facetious is the accomplishment of
                    courtiers and blemish of the wise.---Be wary, and preserve the state of thine own
                character, and leave sport and buffoonery to jesters and courtiers.  
              XVI 
              One of my associates brought me a complaint of his perverse fortune, saying, "I
                  have small means and a large family, and can not bear up with my load of poverty. Often
                  has a thought crossed my mind, suggesting, Let me remove into another country, that in
                    whatever way I can manage a livelihood none may be informed of my good or bad luck."
                ---(Often he went asleep hungry, and nobody was aware, saying, "Who is he?"
                Often did his life hang upon his lip, and none lamented over him.)--- "On the other
                  hand, I reflect on the exultation of my rivals, saying, They will scoffingly sneer
                    behind my back, and impute my zeal in behalf of my family to a want of humanity.---Do
                  but behold that graceless vagabond who can never witness the face of good fortune. Be will
                  consult the ease of his own person and abandon to distress his wife and children.---And,
                  as is known, I have some small skill in the science of accounts. If, through your
                  respected interest, any office can be obtained that may be the means of quieting my mind,
                  I shall not, during the remainder of life, be able to express my sense of its
                gratitude."  
              I replied, "O brother, the service of kings offers a twofold prospect---a hope of
                maintenance and a fear for existence; and it accords not with the counsel of the wise,
                under that expectation, to incur this risk.---No tax-gatherer will enter the dervish's
                abode, saying, Pay me the rent of a field and orchard; either put up with trouble and
                  chagrin, or give thy heartstrings to the crows to pluck."  
              He said, "This speech is not made as applicable to my case, nor have you given me
                  a categorical answer. Have you not heard what has been remarked, 'His hand will tremble on
                  rendering his account who has been accessory to a dishonest act.---Righteousness will
                  insure the divine favor; I never met him going astray who took the righteous path.'---And
                  philosophers have said, 'Four orders of people are mortally afraid of four others---the
                  revenue embezzler, of the king; the thief, of the watchman; the fornicator, of the
                  eavesdropper; and the adulteress, of the censor.' But what has he to fear from the
                  comptroller who has a fair set of account books?--- 'Be not extravagant and corrupt while
                  in office if thou wish that the malice of thy rival may be circumscribed on settling thy
                  accounts. Be undefiled, O brother, in thy integrity, and fear nobody; washer men will beat
                only dirty clothes against a stone.'"  
              I replied, "The story of that fox suits your case, which they saw running away,
                  stumbling and getting up. Somebody asked him, 'What calamity has happened to put you in
                  such a state of trepidation?' He said, 'I have heard that they are putting a camel in
                  requisition.' The other answered, 'O silly animal! what connection has a camel with you,
                  or what resemblance is there between you and it?' He said, 'Be silent; for were the
                  envious from malevolence to insist that this is a camel, and I should be seized for one,
                  who would be so solicitous about me as to inquire into my case?' And before they can bring
                  the antidote from Iraq the person bitten by the snake may be dead. In like manner, you
                  possess knowledge and integrity, discrimination and probity, yet spies lie in ambush, and
                  informers lurk in corners, who, notwithstanding your moral rectitude, will note down the
                  opposite; and should you anyhow stand arraigned before the king, and occupy the place of
                  his reprehension, who in that State would step forward in your defense? Accordingly, I
                  would advise that you should secure the kingdom of contentment, and give up all thoughts
                  of preferment. As the wise have said: "The benefits of a sea voyage are innumerable;
                but if thou seek for safety, it is to be found only on shore.'"  
              My friend listened to this speech; he got into a passion, caviled at my fable, and
                  began to question it with warmth and asperity, saying, "What wisdom or propriety,
                  good sense or morality, is there in this? Here is verified that maxim of the sage, which
                  tells us they are friends alone that can serve us in a jail, for all our enemies may
                  pretend friendship at our own table.--- 'Esteem him not a friend who during thy prosperity
                  will brag of his love and brotherly affection.' I account him a friend who will take his
                friend by the hand when struggling with despair, and overwhelmed with misfortune."  
              I perceived within myself, saying, "He is disturbed, and listens to my advice with
                  impatience"; and, having called the sahib diwan, or lord high treasurer, in
                  virtue of a former intimacy that subsisted between us, I stated his case and spoke so
                  fully upon his skill and merits, that he put him in nomination for a training office.
                  After some time, having adverted to his kindly disposition and approved of his good
                  management, his promotion was in train, and he got confirmed in a much higher station.
                  Thus was the star of his good fortune in ascension, 'till it rose into the zenith of
                  ambition; and he became the favorite of his majesty the king, toward whom all turned for
                  counsel, and upon whom all eyes rested their hopes! I rejoiced at this prosperous change
                  of his affairs, and said: "Repine not at thy bankrupt circumstances, nor let thy
                  heart despond, for the fountain of immortality has its source of chaos. "Take heed, O
                  brother in affliction! and be not disheartened, For God has in store many hidden mercies.
                  Sit not down soured at the revolutions of the times, for patience is bitter, yet it will
                yield sweet fruit." 
              At that juncture I happened to accompany a party of friends on a journey to Hijaz, or
                  Arabia Petraea. On my return from the pilgrimage to Mecca, he came out two stages to meet
                  me. I perceived that his outward plight was wretched, and his garb that of dervishes. I
                  asked, "How is this?" He replied, "Just as you said, a faction bore me a
                  grudge and charged me with malpractice; and the king, be his reign eternal, would not
                  investigate the truth of that charge, and my old and best friends stood aloof from my
                  defense, and overlooked my claims on our former acquaintance.---When, through an act of
                  God, a man has fallen, the whole world will put their feet upon his neck; when they see
                  that fortune has taken him by the hand, they will put their hands upon their breasts, and
                  be loud in his praise.---In short, I underwent all manner of persecution 'till within this
                  week, that the tidings of the safe return of the pilgrims reached us, when I got a release
                  from my heavy durance and a confiscation of my hereditary tenements." I said,
                "At that time you did not listen to my admonition, when I warned you that the service
                  of princes is, like a voyage at sea, profitable but hazardous: you either get a treasure
                  or perish miserably.---The merchant gains the shore with gold in both his hands, or a wave
                  will one day leave him dead on its beach."---Not deeming it generous any further to
                  irritate a poor man's wound with the asperity of reproach, or to sprinkle his sore with
                  the salt of harsh words, I made a summary conclusion in these two verses, and said:---
                "Wert thou not aware that thou shouldst find fetters on thy feet when thou wouldst
                  not listen to the generous man's counsel? Thrust not again thy finger into a scorpion's
                hole till thou canst endure the pain of its sting."  
              XVI 
              I was the companion of a holy fraternity, whose manners were correct from piety, and
                  minds disciplined from probity. An eminent prince entertained a high and respectful
                  opinion of the worth of this brotherhood, and had assigned it an endowment. Perhaps one of
                  them committed an act unworthy of the character of dervishes; for the good opinion of that
                  personage was forfeited, and the market of their support shut. I wished that I could by
                  any means re-establish the maintenance of my friends, and attempted to wait on the great
                  man; but his porter opposed my entrance, and turned me away with rudeness. I excused him
                  conformably with what the witty have said: "Till thou canst take an introduction
                  along with thee approach not the gate of a prince, vizier, or lord; for the dog and the
                  doorkeeper, on espying a beggar, will the one seize his skirt and the other his
                collar."  
              When the favorite attendants of that great man were aware of my situation, they ushered
                  me into his presence with respect, and offered me the highest seat; but in humility I took
                  the lowest, and said: "Permit that I, the slave of the abject, should seat myself on
                  a level with servants."---The great man answered, "My God, my God! what room is
                  there for this speech? Wert thou to seat thyself upon the pupil of mine eye, I would court
                thy dalliance, for thou art lovely."  
              In short, I took my seat, and entered upon a variety of topics, 'till the indiscretion
                  of my friends was brought upon the carpet, when I said: "What fault did the lord of
                  past munificence remark, that his servant should seem so contemptible in his sight?
                  Individually with God is the perfection of majesty and goodness, who can discern our
                  failings and continue to us his support." When the prince heard this sentiment he
                  subscribed to its omnipotence; and, with regard to the stipendiary allowance of my
                  friends, he ordered its continuance as heretofore, and a faithful discharge of all
                  arrears. I thanked him for his generosity, kissed the dust of obeisance, apologized for my
                  boldness, and at the moment of taking my leave, added: "When the fane of the Kaaba,
                  at Mecca, became their object from a far distant land, pilgrims would hurry on to visit it
                  for many farsangs. It behooves thee to put up with such as we are, for nobody will throw a
                stone at a tree that bears no fruit."  
              XVIII 
              A prince inherited immense riches by succeeding to his father. He opened the hand of
                  liberality, displayed his munificence, and bestowed innumerable gifts upon his troops and
                  people. "The brain will not be perfumed by a censer of green aloes-wood; place it
                  over the fire that it may diffuse fragrance like ambergris. If ambitious of a great name,
                  make a practice of munificence, for the crop will not shoot till thou shalt sow the
                seed."  
              A narrow-minded courtier began to admonish him, saying, "Verily, former sovereigns
                  have collected this wealth with scrupulosity and stored it advisedly. Check your hand in
                  this waste, for accidents wait ahead, and foes lurk behind. God forbid that you should
                  want it on a day of need.-Wert thou to distribute the contents of a granary among the
                  people, every master of a family might receive a grain of rice; why not exact a grain of
                silver from each, that thou mightest daily hoard a chamber full of treasure?"  
              The prince turned his face aside from this speech, so contrary to his own lofty
                  sentiments, and harshly reprimanded him, saying, "A great and glorious God made me
                  sovereign of this property, that I might enjoy and spend it; and posted me not a sentinel,
                  to hoard and watch over it.---Carown perished, who possessed forty magazines of treasure;
                Nushirowan died not, who left behind him a fair reputation."  
              XIX 
              They have related that at a hunting-seat they were roasting some game for Nushirowan,
                  and as there was no salt they were dispatching a servant to the village to fetch some.
                  Nushirowan called to him, saying, "Take it at its fair price, and not by force, lest
                  a bad precedent be established and the village desolated." They asked, "What
                  damage can ensue from this trifle?" He answered, "Originally, the basis of
                  oppression in this world was small, and every newcomer added to it, 'till it reached to
                  its present extent.--Let the monarch eat but one apple from a peasant's orchard, and his
                  guards, or slaves, will pull up the tree by its root. From the plunder of five eggs, that
                the king shall sanction, his troops will stick a thousand fowls on their spits."  
              XX 
              I have heard of a revenue-collector who would distrain the huts of the peasantry, that
                  he might enrich the treasury of the sovereign, regardless of that maxim of the wise, who
                  have said, "Whoever can offend the Most High, that he may gain the heart of a
                  fellow-creature, God on high will instigate that creature against him, 'till he dig out
                  the foundation of his fortune.---That crackling in the fame is not caused by burning rue,
                but it is the sigh of the afflicted that occasions it."  
              They say, of all animals the lion is the chief; and of beasts the ass is the meanest;
                  yet, with the concurrence of the wise, the burden-bearing ass is preferable to the
                  man-devouring lion. "The poor ass, though devoid of understanding, will be held
                  precious when carrying a burden; oxen and asses that carry loads are preferable to men
                that injure their fellow creatures."  
              The king had reported to him a part of his nefarious conduct. He put him to the rack,
                  and tortured him to death. "Thou canst not obtain the sovereign's approbation 'till
                  thou make sure of the good-will of his people. Wish thou that God shall be bountiful to
                thee, be thou good thyself to the creatures of God."  
              One who had suffered from his oppression passed him at the time of his execution, and
                  said: "It is not every man that may have the strong arm of high station, that can in
                  his government take an immoderate freedom with the subjects' property. It is possible to
                  cram a bone down the throat, but when it sticks at the navel it will burst open the
                belly."  
              XXI 
              They tell a story of an evil-disposed person who struck a pious good man on the head
                  with a stone. Having no power of revenge, the dervish was keeping the stone by him 'till
                  an occasion when the sovereign let loose the army of his wrath, and cast him into a
                  dungeon. The poor man went up and flung the stone at his head. The person spoke to him,
                  saying, "Who are you, and why did you throw this stone at my head?" He answered,
                "I am that poor man, and this is the same stone that you on a certain occasion flung
                  at my head." He said, "Where have you been all this time?" The poor man
                  answered, "I stood in awe of your high station, but now that I find you in a dungeon,
                  I avail myself of the opportunity, as they have said--- 'Whilst they saw the worthless man
                  in prosperity, the wise thought proper to show him respect. Now thou hast not sharp and
                  tearing nails, it is prudent for thee to defer to engage with the wicked. Whoever grappled
                  with a steel-armed wrist exposed his own silver arm to torture. Wait 'till fortune can
                manacle his hands, then beat out his brains to the satisfaction of thy friends.'"  
              XXV 
              I have heard that one of the kings of Arabia directed the officers of his treasury,
                  saying, "You will double a certain person's salary, whatever it may be, for he is
                  constant in attendance and ready for orders, while the other courtiers are diverted by
                  play, and negligent of their duty." A good and holy man overheard this, and heaved a
                  sigh and groan from the bottom of his bosom. They asked, saying, "What vision did you
                  see?" He replied, "The exalted mansions of his devoted servants will be after
                  this manner portioned out at the judgment-seat of a Most High and Mighty Deity!---If for
                  two mornings a person is assiduous about the person of the king, on the third he will in
                  some shape regard him with affection. The sincerely devout exist in the hope that they
                  shall not depart disappointed from God's threshold. The rank of a prince is the reward of
                  obedience. Disobedience to command is a proof of rejection. Whoever has the aspect of the
                upright and good will lay the face of duty at this threshold."  
              XXVI 
              They tell a story of a tyrant who bought firewood from the poor at a low price, and
                  sold it to the rich at an advance. A good and holy man went up to him and said, "Thou
                  art a snake, who bites everybody thou sees; or an owl, who digs up and makest a ruin of
                  the place where thou sits. Although thy injustice may pass unpunished among us, it can not
                  escape God, the knower of secrets. Be not unjust with the people of this earth, that their
                  complaints may not rise up to heaven." They say the unjust man was offended at his
                  words, turned aside his face, and showed him no civility, as they have expressed it (in
                  the Qur'an): He, the glorified God, overtook him amidst his sins: 'till one night,
                  when the fire of his kitchen fell upon the stack of wood, consumed all his property, and
                  laid him from the bed of voluptuousness upon the ashes of hell torments. That good and
                  holy man happened to be passing and observed that he was remarking to his friends, "I
                  can not fancy whence this fire fell upon my dwelling." He said, "From the smoke
                  of the hearts of the poor!---Guard against the smoke of the sore-afflicted heart, for an
                  inside sore will at last gather into a head. Give nobody's heart pain so long as thou
                canst avoid it, for one sigh may set a whole world into a flame."  
              They have related that these verses were inscribed in golden letters upon Kai-khosrau's
                  crown: "How many years, and what a continuance of ages, that mankind shall on this
                  earth walk over my head. As the kingdom came to me from hand to hand, so it shall pass
                into the hands of others."  
              XXVII 
              A person had become a master in the art of wrestling; he knew three hundred and sixty
                  sleights in this art, and could exhibit a fresh trick for every day throughout the year.
                  Perhaps owing to a liking that a corner of his heart took for the handsome person of one
                  of his scholars, he taught him three hundred and fifty-nine of those feats, but he was
                  putting off the instruction of one, and under some pretense deferring it. In short the
                  youth became such a proficient in the art and talent of wrestling that none of his
                  contemporaries had ability to cope with him, 'till he at length had one day boasted before
                  the reigning sovereign, saying, "To any superiority my master possesses over me, he
                  is beholden to my reverence of his seniority, and in virtue of his tutorage; otherwise I
                  am not inferior in power, and am his equal in skill." This want of respect displeased
                  the king. He ordered a wrestling match to be held, and a spacious field to be fenced in
                  for the occasion. The ministers of State, nobles of the court, and gallant men of the
                  realm were assembled, and the ceremonials of the court marshaled. Like a huge and lusty
                  elephant, the youth rushed into the ring with such a crash that had a brazen mountain
                  opposed him he would have moved it from its base. The master being aware that the youth
                  was his superior in strength, engaged him in that strange feat of which he had kept him
                  ignorant. The youth was unacquainted with its guard. Advancing, nevertheless, the master
                  seized him with both hands, and lifting him bodily from the ground, raised him above his
                  head and flung him on the earth. The crowd set up a shout. The king ordered them to give
                  the master an honorary dress and handsome largess, and the youth he addressed with
                  reproach and asperity, saying, " You played the traitor with your own patron, and
                  failed in your presumption of opposing him." He replied, " O sire! my master did
                  not overcome me by strength and ability, but one cunning trick in the art of wrestling was
                  left which he was reserved in teaching me, and by that little feat had to-day the upper
                  hand of me." The master said, " I reserved myself for such a day as this. As the
                  wise have told us, Put it not so much into a friend's power that, if hostilely disposed,
                  he can do you an injury.' Have you not heard what that man said who was treacherously
                  dealt with by his own pupil: ' Either in fact there was no good faith in this world, or
                  nobody has perhaps practiced it in our days. No person learned the art of archery from me
                who did not in the end make me his butt.'?"  
              XXVIII 
              A solitary dervish had taken up his station at the corner of a desert. A king was
                  passing by him. Inasmuch as contentment is the enjoyment of a kingdom, the dervish did not
                  raise his head, nor show him the least mark of attention and, inasmuch as sovereignty is
                  regal pomp, the king took offense, and said : "The tribe of ragged mendicants
                  resemble brute beasts, and have neither grace nor good manners." The vizier stepped
                  up to him, and said: "O generous man! the sovereign of the universe has passed by
                  you; why did you not do him homage, and discharge the duty of obeisance?" He answered
                  and said, " Speak to your sovereign, saying: Expect service from that person who will
                  court your favor; let him moreover know that kings are meant for the protection of the
                  people, and not the people for the subjects of kings. ---Though it be for their benefit
                  that his glory is exalted, yet is the king but the shepherd of the poor. The sheep are not
                  intended for the service of the shepherd, but the shepherd is appointed to tend the sheep.
                  ---Today thou mayest observe one man proud from prosperity, another with a heart sore from
                  adversity; have patience for a few days 'till the dust of the grave can consume the brain
                  of that vain and foolish head. When the record of destiny came to take effect, the
                  distinction of liege and subject disappeared. Were a person to turn up the dust of the
                defunct, he could not distinguish that of the rich man from the poor."  
              These sayings made a strong impression upon the king; he said: "Ask me for
                  something." He replied: "What I desire is, that you will not trouble me
                  again!" The king said, "Favor me with a piece of advice." He answered:
                "Attend to them now that the good things of this life are in thy hands; for wealth
                and dominion are passing from one hand into another."  
              XXX 
              A king ordered an innocent person to be put to death. The man said, "Seek not your
                  own hurt by venting any anger you may entertain against me." The king asked,
                "How?" He replied, "The pain of this punishment will continue with me for a
                  moment, but the sin of it will endure with you forever.--The period of this life passes by
                  like the wind of the desert. Joy and sorrow, beauty and deformity, equally pass away. The
                  tyrant vainly thought that he did me an injury, but round his neck it clung and passed
                  over me." The king profited by this advice, spared his life, and asked his
                forgiveness.  
              XXXI 
              The cabinet ministers of Nushirowan were debating an important affair of State, and
                  each delivered his opinion according to the best of his judgment. In like manner the king
                  also delivered his sentiments, and Abu-zarchamahr, the prime minister, accorded in opinion
                  with him. The other ministers whispered to him, saying, "What did you see superior in
                  the king's opinion that you preferred it to the judgment of so many wise heads?" He
                  replied: "Because the event is doubtful, and the opinion of all rests in the pleasure
                  of the most high God whether it shall be right or wrong. Accordingly it is safer to
                  conform with the judgment of the king, because if that shall prove wrong, our
                  obsequiousness to his will shall secure us from his displeasure. ---To sport an opinion
                  contrary to the judgment of the king were to wash our hands in our own blood. Were he
                  verily to say this day is night, it would behoove us to reply: Lo! there are the moon and
                seven stars."  
              XXXII 
              An impostor plaited his hair and spoke, saying, "I am a descendant of Ali";
                  and he entered the city along with the caravan from Hijaz, saying, "I come a pilgrim
                  from Mecca"; and he presented a Casidah or elegy to the king, saying, " I have
                  composed it!" The king gave him money, treated him with respect, and ordered him to
                  be shown much flattering attention; 'till one of the courtiers, who had that day returned
                  from a voyage at sea, said, "I saw him on the Eeduzha, or anniversary of sacrifice at
                  Busrah; how then can he be a Hadji, or pilgrim?" Another said, "Now I recollect
                  him, his father was a Christian at Malatiyah (Malta); how then can he be a descendant of
                  Ali?" And they discovered his verses in the divan of Anwari. The king ordered that
                  they should beat and drive him away, saying, "How came you to utter so many
                  falsehoods?" He replied, "O sovereign of the universe! I will utter one speech
                  more, and if that may not prove true, I shall deserve whatever punishment you may
                  command." The king asked, " What may that be?" He said: " If a peasant
                  bring thee a cup of junket, two measures of it will be water and one spoonful of it
                  buttermilk. If thy slave spoke idly be not offended, for great travelers deal mostly in
                  the marvelous!" The king smiled and replied, "You never in your life spoke a
                  truer word." He directed them to gratify his expectations, and he departed happy and
                content.  
              XXXIII 
              They have related that one of the viziers would compassionate the weak and meditate the
                  good of everybody. He happened to fall under the royal displeasure, and they all strove to
                  obtain his release. Such as had him in custody were indulgent in their restraint, and his
                  fellow-grandees were loud in proclaiming his virtues, 'till the king pardoned his fault. A
                  good and holy man was apprised of these events, and said: "In order to conciliate the
                  good-will of friends, it were better to sell our patrimonial garden; in order to boil the
                  pot of well-wishers, it were good to convert our household furniture into firewood. Do
                good even to the wicked; it is as well to shut a dog's mouth with a crumb."  
              XXXIV 
              One of Haroun-al-Rashid's children went up to his father in a passion, saying, "A
                  certain officer's son has abused me in my mother's name." Haroun asked his ministers,
                " What ought to be such a person's punishment?" One made a sign to have him put
                  to death; another to have his tongue cut out; and a third, to have him fined and banished.
                  Haroun said: "O my child! it were generous to forgive him; but if you have not
                  resolution to do that, do you abuse his mother in return, yet not to such a degree as to
                  exceed the bounds of retaliation, for in that case the injury would be on our part, and
                  the complaint on that of the antagonist.---In the opinion of the prudent he is no hero
                  that can dare to combat a furious elephant but that man is in truth a hero who, when
                  provoked to anger, will not speak intemperately. A cross-grained fellow abused a certain
                  person; he bore it patiently, and said "O well-disposed man! I am still more wicked
                than thou art calling me; for I know my defects better than thou canst know them."  
              XXXV 
              I was seated in a vessel, along with some persons of distinction, when a boat sunk
                  astern of us and two brothers were drawn into the whirlpool. One of our gentlemen called
                  to the pilot, saying, "Save those two drowning men and I will give you a hundred
                  dinars." The pilot went and rescued one of them, but the other perished. I observed,
                "That man's time was come, therefore you were tardy in assisting him, and alert in
                  saving this other." The pilot smiled, and replied, "What you say is the essence
                  of inevitable necessity; yet was my zeal more hearty in rescuing this one, because on an
                  occasion when I was tired in the desert he set me on a camel; whereas, when a boy I had
                  received a horsewhipping from that other." God Almighty was all justice and
                    equity: Whoever labored unto good experienced good in himself; And he who toiled unto evil
                    experienced evil. So long as thou art able grate nobody's heart, for in this path
                  there must be thorns. Expedite the concerns of the poor and needy; for thy own concerns
                may need to be expedited.  
              XXXVII 
              A person announced to Nushirowan the Just, saying, "I have heard that God,
                  glorious and great, has removed from this world a certain man who was your enemy." He
                  said, "Hhave you had any intelligence that he has overlooked me? In the death of a
                rival I have no room for exultation, since my life also is not to last forever."  
              XXXVIII 
              At the court of Kisra, or Nushirowan, a cabinet council was debating some State affair.
                  Abu-zarchamahr, who sat as president, was silent. They asked him, "Why do you not
                  join us in this discussion?" He replied, " Such ministers of State are like
                  physicians, and a physician will prescribe a medicine only to a sick man; accordingly, so
                  long as I see that your opinions are judicious, it were ill-judged in me to obtrude a
                  word.---While business can proceed without my interference, it does not behoove me to
                  speak on the subject; but were I to see a blind man walking into a pit, I would be much to
                blame if I remained silent."  
              XXXIX 
              When he reduced the kingdom of Misr, or to obedience, Haroun-al-Rashid said, " In
                  contempt of that impious rebel (Pharaoh), who, in his pride of the sovereignty of Egypt,
                  boasted a divinity, I will bestow its government only on the vilest of my slaves." He
                  had a Negro bondsman, called Khosayib, preciously stupid, and him he appointed to rule
                  over Egypt. They tell us that his judgment and understanding were such, that when a body
                  of farmers complained to him, saying, "We had planted some cotton shrubs on the banks
                  of the Nile, and the rains came unseasonably, and swept them all away," he replied,
                "You ought to sow wool, that it might not be swept away!" A good and holy man
                  heard this, and said: "Were our fortune to be increased in proportion to our
                  knowledge, none could be scantier than the share of the fool; but fortune will bestow such
                  wealth upon the ignorant as shall astonish a hundred of the learned. Power and fortune
                  depend not on knowledge, they are obtained only through the aid of heaven; for it has
                  often happened in this world that the illiterate are honored, and the wise held in scorn.
                  The fool in his idleness found a treasure under a ruin; the chemist, or projector, fell
                the victim of disappointment and chagrin."  
                
              Chapter II 
              Of The Morals Of Dervishes 
              I 
              A person of distinction asked a parsa, or devout and holy man, saying, "What do
                  you offer in justification of a certain abid all other species of Muhammadan monk,
                  whose character others have been so ready to question?" He replied: "In his
                  outward behavior I see nothing to blame, and with the secrets of his heart I claim no
                  acquaintance.---Whomsoever thou sees in a parsa's habit, consider him a parsa, or holy,
                  and esteem him as a good man; and if thou know not what is passing in his mind, what
                business has the moatasib, or censor, with the inside of the house?"  
              II 
              I saw a dervish who, having laid his head at the fane of the Kaaba of Mecca, was
                  complaining and saying, "O gracious, O merciful God! thou know what can proceed from
                  the sinful and ignorant that may be worthy of thy acceptance!---I brought my excuse of
                  imperfect performance, for I have no claim on the score of obedience. The wicked repent
                them of their sins; such as know God confess a deficiency of worship."  
                          
                   
              Abids, or the pious, seek a reward of their devotion, merchants a profit on
                      their traffic. I, a devoted servant, have brought hope, not obedience, and have come as a
                      beggar, and not for lucre! Do unto me what is worthy of thyself; but deal not with me
                        as I myself have deserved. Whether thou wilt slay me or pardon my offense, my head and
                      face are prostrate at thy threshold. Thy servant has no will of his own; whatever thou
                      commands, that he will perform. At the door of the Kaaba I saw a petitioner, who was
                      praying and weeping bitterly. I ask not, saying, "Approve of my obedience, but draw
                the pen of forgiveness across my sins."  
              III 
              Within the sanctuary of the Kaaba, at Mecca, I saw Abdu'l-cadur the Gilani, who having
                  laid his face upon the Hasa, or black stone, was saying, "Spare and pardon me, O God!
                  and if, at all events, I am doomed to punishment, raise me up at the day of resurrection
                  blindfolded, that I may not be put to shame in the eyes of the righteous." Every
                  morning when the day begins to dawn, with my face in the dust of humility, I am saying,
                "O thou, whom I never can forget, dost thou ever bestow a thought on thy
                servant?"  
              IV 
              A thief got into a holy man's cell; but, however much he searched, he could find
                  nothing to steal, and was going away disappointed. The good soul was aware of what was
                  passing, and taking up the rug on which he had slept, he put it in his way that he might
                  not miss his object.---I have heard that the heroes on the path of God will not distress
                  the hearts of their enemies. How canst thou attain this dignified station who art at
                  strife and warfare with thy friends? The loving kindness of the righteous, whether before
                  your face or behind your back, is not such that they will censure you when absent, and
                  offer to die for you when present.---Face to face meek as a lamb, behind your back like a
                  man devouring wolf. Whoever brings you, and sums up the faults of others, will doubtless
                expose your defects to them.  
              V 
              Some traveling mendicants had agreed to club in a body and participate in the cares and
                  comforts of society. I expressed a wish that I might be one of the party, but they refused
                  to admit me. I said: "It is rare and inconsistent with the generous dispositions of
                  dervishes to turn their faces from a good-fellowship with the poor, and to deny them its
                  benefits, for on my part I feel such a zeal and good-will, that in the service of the
                  liberal I am likely to prove rather an active associate than a grievous load. Though
                    not one of those who are mounted on the camels, I will do my best, that I may carry their
                    saddle-cloths. One of them answered and said: "Be not offended at what you have
                  heard for some days back a thief joined us in the garb of a dervish, and strung himself
                  upon the cord of our acquaintance.---How can people know what he is that wears that dress?
                  The writer can alone tell the contents of the letter." In consequence of that
                  reverence in which the dervish character is held, they did not think of his profligacy and
                  admitted him into their society. The outward character of the holy is a patched cloak;
                  this much is sufficient, that it has a threadbare hood. Be industrious in thy calling, and
                  wear whatever dress thou chooses. Put a diadem on thy head, and bear a standard on thy
                  shoulder. Holiness does not consist in a coarse frock. Let a zahid, or holy man, be
                  truly pious, and he may dress in satin. Sanctity is not merely a change of dress; it is an
                  abandonment of the world, its pomp and vanity. It requires a hero to wear a coat of mail,
                for what would it profit to dress an hermaphrodite, or coward, in a suit of armor?  
              In short we had one day traveled 'till dark, and at night composed ourselves for sleep
                  under the wall of a castle. That graceless thief took up his neighbor's ewer, saying,
                "I am going to my ablutions"; and he was setting out for plunder. Behold a
                  religious man, who threw a patched cloak over his shoulders; he made the covering of the
                  Kaaba the housing of an ass. So soon as he got out of sight of the dervishes, he scaled a
                  bastion of the fort and stole a casket. Before break of day that gloomy-minded robber had
                  got a great way off, and left his innocent companions asleep. In the morning they were all
                  carried into the citadel, and thrown into a dungeon. From that time we have declined any
                  addition to our party, and kept apart to ourselves, For there is safety in unity, But
                    danger in duality or a multitude. When an individual of a sect committed an act of
                  folly, the high and the low sank in their dignity. Dost thou not see that one ox in a
                  pasturage will cast a slur upon all the oxen of the village? I said: "Let there be
                  thanksgiving to a Deity of majesty and glory that I am not forbid the benefits of
                  dervishes, notwithstanding I am in appearance excluded from their society; and I am
                  instructed by this narration, and others like me may profit by its moral during their
                  remaining lives.---From one indiscreet person in an assembly a host of the prudent may get
                  hurt. If they fill a cistern to the brim with rose-water, and let a dog fall into it, the
                whole will be contaminated."  
              VI 
              A zahid was the guest of a king. When he sat down at table he ate more sparingly
                  from that than his appetite inclined him, and when he stood up at prayers he continued
                  longer at them than it was his custom; that they might form a high opinion of his
                  sanctity.---I fear, O Arab! that thou wilt not reach the Kaaba; for the road that thou art
                  taking leads to Turkestan, or the region of infidels. When he returned home he ordered the
                  table to be spread that he might eat. His son was a youth of a shrewd understanding. He
                  said: "O father, perhaps you ate little or nothing at the feast of the king?" He
                  answered, "In his presence I ate scarce anything that could answer its purpose!"
                Then retorted the boy, "Repeat also your prayers, that nothing be omitted that can
                  serve a purpose." Yes, thy virtues thou hast exposed in the palm of thy hand, thy
                  vices thou has hid under thy arm-pit. Take heed, O hypocrite, what thou wilt be able to
                purchase with this base money on the day of need or day of judgment.  
              VII 
              I remember that in my early youth I was overmuch religious and vigilant, and
                  scrupulously pious and abstinent. One night I sat up in attendance on my father, on whom
                  be God's mercy, never once closed my eyes during the whole night, and held the precious
                  Qur'an open on my lap, while the company around us were fast asleep. I said to my father:
                "Not an individual of these will raise his head that he may perform his
                  genuflections, or ritual of prayer; but they are all so sound asleep, that you might
                  conclude they were dead." He replied: "O emanation of your father, you had also
                  better have slept than that you should thus calumniate the failings of mankind.---The
                  braggart can discern only his own precious person; he will draw the veil of conceit all
                  around him. Were fortune to bestow upon him God's all-searching eye, he would find nobody
                weaker than himself."  
              X 
              On one occasion, at the metropolitan mosque of Balbuk, I was holding forth, by way of
                  admonition to a congregation cold and dead at heart, and not to be moved from the
                  materialism of this world into the paths of mysticism. I perceived that the spirit of my
                  discourse was making no impression, nor were the sparks of my enthusiasm likely to strike
                  fire into their humid wood. I grew weary of instructing brutes, and of holding up a mirror
                  to an assembly of the blind; but the door of exposition was thrown open, and the chain of
                  argument extended; and in explanation of this text in the Qur'an, "We are nearer to
                  him (God) than the vein of his neck"---I had reached that passage of my sermon where
                  I thus express myself: "Such a mistress as is closer to me in her affection than I am
                  to myself, but this is marvelous that I am estranged from her. What shall I say, and to
                whom can I tell it, that she lies on my bosom and I am alienated from her."  
              The intoxicating spirit of this discourse ran into my head, and the dregs of the cup
                  still rested in my hand, when a traveler, as passing by, entered the outer circle of the
                  congregation, and its expiring undulation lit upon him. He sent forth such a groan that
                  the others in sympathy with him joined in lamentation, and the rawest of the assembly
                  bubbled in unison. I exclaimed, "Praise be to God! those far off are present in their
                  knowledge, and those near by are distant from their ignorance. If the hearer has not the
                  faculty of comprehending the sermon, expect not the vigor of genius in the preacher. Give
                  a scope to the field of inclination, that the orator may have room to strike the ball of
                eloquence over it."  
              XI 
              One night in the desert of Mecca, from an excess of drowsiness, I had not a foot to
                  enable me to proceed; and, laying my head on the earth, I gave myself up for lost, and
                  desired the camel-driver to leave me to my fate.---How could the foot of the poor jaded
                  pedestrian go on, now that the Bactrian dromedary got impatient of its burden? While the
                  body of a fat man is getting lean, a lean man must fall the victim of a hardship. The
                  camel-driver replied: "O brother, holy Mecca is ahead, and the profane robber behind;
                  if you come forward you escape, but if you stay here you die!" During the night
                  journey of the caravan, and in the track of the desert, it is fascinating to doze under
                  the acacia-thorn tree; but, on this indulgence, we must resign all thoughts of surviving
                it. 
              XII 
              I saw on the seashore a holy man who had been torn by a tiger, and could get no salve
                  to heal his wound. For a length of time he suffered much pain, and was all along offering
                  thanks to the Most High. They asked him, saying, "Why are you so grateful?" He
                  answered, "God be praised that I am overtaken with misfortune and not with sin! Were
                  that beloved friend, God, to give me over to death, take heed, and think not that I should
                  be solicitous about life. I would ask, What hast thou seen amiss in thy poor servant that
                  thy heart should take offense at me? for that could alone give me a moment's
                uneasiness." 
              XIII 
              Having some pressing occasion, a dervish stole a rug from the hut of a friend. The
                  judge ordered that they should cut off his hand. The owner of the rug made intercession
                  for him, saying, "I have forgiven him." The judge replied, At your instance I
                  can not relax the extreme sentence of the law." He said: "In what you ordered
                  you spoke justly. Nevertheless, whoever steals a portion of any property dedicated to alms
                  must not suffer the forfeiture of his hand, for A religious mendicant is not the
                    proprietor of anything; and whatever appertains to dervishes is devoted to the
                  necessitous." The judge withdrew his hand from punishing him, and by way of reprimand
                  asked, "Had the world become so circumscribed that you could not commit a theft but
                  in the dwelling of such a friend?" He answered, "Have you not heard what they
                  have said, ' Sweep everything away from the houses of your friends, but knock not at the
                  doors of your enemies.' When overwhelmed with calamity let not thy body pine in misery.
                Strip thy foes of their skins, and thy friends of their jackets."  
              XIV 
              A king said to a holy man, "Are you ever thinking of me?" "Yes,"
                replied he, "at such times as I am forgetting God Almighty! He will wander all around
                  whom God shall drive from his gate; and he will not let him go to another door whom he
                shall direct into his own."  
              XV 
              One of the righteous in a dream saw a king in paradise, and a parsa, or holy man, in
                  hell. He questioned himself, saying, "What is the cause of the exaltation of this,
                  and the degradation of that, for we have fancied their converse?" A voice came from
                  above, answering, "This king is in heaven because of his affection for the holy, and
                  that parsa is in hell because of his connection with the kingly."---What can a coarse
                  frock, rosary, and patched cloak avail? Abstain from such evil works as may defile thee.
                  There is no occasion to put a felt cowl upon thy head. Be a dervish in thy actions, and
                wear a Tartarian coronet.  
              XVI 
              A pedestrian, naked from head to foot, left Cufah with the caravan of pilgrims for
                  Hijaz, or Mecca, and came along with us. I looked at and saw him destitute of every
                  necessary for the journey; yet he was cheerfully pushing on, and bravely remarking:
                "I am neither mounted on a camel nor a mule under a burden. I am neither the lord of
                  vassals nor the vassal of a lord. I think not of present sorrows or past vanities, but
                  breathe the breath of ease and live the life of freedom!" A gentleman mounted on a
                  camel said to him, "O dervish, whither are you going? return, or you must perish
                  miserably." He did not heed what he said, but entered the desert on foot and
                  proceeded. On our reaching the palm plantation of Mahmud, fate overtook the rich man, and
                  he died. The dervish went up to his bier and said, "I did not perish amidst hardship
                  on foot, and you expired on a camel's back." A person sat all night weeping by the
                  side of a sick friend. Next day he died, and the invalid recovered!---Yes! many a fleet
                  horse perished by the way, and that lame ass reached the end of the journey. How many of
                the vigorous and hale did they put underground, and that wounded man recovered!  
              XX 
              They asked Lucman, the fabulist, "From whom did you learn manners?" He
                  answered, "From the unmannerly, for I was careful to avoid whatever part of their
                  behavior seemed to me bad." They will not speak a word in joke from which the wise
                  can not derive instruction; let them read a hundred chapters of wisdom to a fool, and they
                will all seem but a jest to him.  
              XXI 
              They tell a story of an abid, who in the course of a night would eat ten mans,
                  or pounds, of food, and in his devotions repeat the whole Qur'an before morning. A good
                  and holy man heard this, and said, "Had he eaten half a loaf of bread, and gone to
                  sleep, he would have done a more meritorious act." Keep thy inside unencumbered with
                  victuals, that the light of good works may shine within thee; but you art void of wisdom
                and knowledge, because thou art filled up to the nose with food.  
              XXII 
              The divine favor had placed the lamp of grace in the path of a wanderer in forbidden
                  ways, 'till it directed him into the circle of the righteous, and the blessed society of
                  dervishes, and their spiritual co-operation enabled him to convert his wicked propensities
                  into praiseworthy deeds, and to restrain himself in sensual indulgences; yet were the
                  tongues of calumniators questioning his sincerity, and saying, He retains his original
                  habits, and there is no trusting to his piety and goodness.---By the means of repentance
                  thou mayest get delivered from the wrath of God, but there is no escape from the
                  slanderous tongue of man. He was unable to put up with the virulence of their remarks, and
                  took his complaint to his ghostly father, saying, "I am much troubled by the tongues
                  of mankind." The holy man wept, and answered, "How can you be sufficiently
                  grateful for this blessing, that you are better than they represent you?---How often wilt
                  thou call aloud, saying, The malignant and envious are calumniating wretched me, that they
                  rise up to shed my blood, and that they sit down to devise me mischief. Be thou good
                  thyself, and let people speak evil of thee; it is better than to be wicked, and that they
                  should consider thee as good."---But, on the other hand, behold me, of whose
                  perfectness all entertain the best opinion, while I am the mirror of imperfection.---Had I
                  done what they have said, I should have been a pious and moral man. Verily, I may
                    conceal myself from the sight of my neighbor, But God knows what is secret and what is
                    open. There is a shut door between me and mankind, that they may not pry into my sins;
                  but what, O Omniscience! can a closed door avail against thee, who art equally informed of
                what is manifest or concealed?  
              XXIII 
              I lodged a complaint with one of our reverend Shaikhs, saying: "A certain person
                  has borne testimony against my character on the score of lasciviousness." He
                  answered, "Shame him by your continence.---Be thou virtuously disposed, that the
                  detractor may not have it in his power to indulge his malignity. So long as the harp is in
                  tune, how can it have its ear pulled (or suffer correction by being put in tune) by the
                minstrel?"  
              XXIV 
              They asked one of the Shaikhs of Sham, or Syria, saying: "What is the condition of
                  the Sufi sect?" He answered, "Formerly they were in this world a fraternity
                  dispersed in the flesh, but united in the spirit; but now they are a body well clothed
                  carnally, and ragged in divine mystery." Whilst thy heart will be every moment
                  wandering into a different place, in thy recluse state thou canst not see purity; but
                  though thou possesses rank and wealth, lands and chattels, if thy heart be fixed on God,
                thou art a hermit.  
              XXV 
              On one occasion we had marched, I recollect, all the night along with the caravan, and
                  halted toward morning on the skirts of the wilderness. One mystically distracted, who
                  accompanied us on that journey, set up a loud lamentation at dawn, went a-wandering into
                  the desert, and did not take a moment's rest. Next day I said to him, "What condition
                  was that?" He replied, "I remarked the nightingales that they had come to carol
                  in the groves, the pheasants to prattle on the mountains, the frogs to croak in the pools,
                  and the wild beasts to roar in the forests, and thought with myself, saying, It can not be
                  generous that all are awake in God's praise and I am wrapped up in the sleep of
                  forgetfulness!---Last night a bird was caroling toward the morning; it stole my patience
                  and reason, my fortitude and understanding. My lamentation had perhaps reached the ear of
                  one of my dearly-beloved friends. He said, 'I did not believe that the singing of a bird
                  could so distract thee!' I answered, This is not the duty of the human species, that the
                birds are singing God's praise and that I am silent."  
              XXVI 
              Once, on a pilgrimage to Hijaz, I was the fellow-traveler of some piously disposed
                  young men, and on a footing of familiarity and intimacy with them. From time to time we
                  were humming a tune and chanting a spiritual hymn, and an abid, who bore us
                  company, kept disparaging the morals of the dervishes, and was callous to their
                  sufferings, 'till we reached the palm plantation of the tribe of Hulal, when a boy of a
                  tawny complexion issued from the Arab horde and sang such a plaintive melody as would
                  arrest the bird in its flight through the air. I remarked the abid's camel that it kicked
                  up and pranced, and, throwing the abid, danced into the wilderness. I said: "O
                  reverend Shaikh! that spiritual strain threw a brute into an ecstasy, and it is not in
                  like manner working a change in you!--Know thou what that nightingale of the dawn
                  whispered to me? What sort of man art thou, indeed, who art ignorant of love?---The camel
                  is in an ecstasy of delight from the Arab's song. If thou hast no taste to relish this
                  thou art a cross-grained brute---Now that the camel is elated with rapture and delight, if
                  a man is insensible to these he is an ass. The zephyr, gliding through the verdure on
                    the earth,Shakes the twig of the ban-tree, but moves not the solid rocks. Whatever
                  thou beholdest is loud in extolling him. That heart which has an ear is full of the divine
                  mystery. It is not the nightingale that alone serenades his rose; for every thorn on the
                rose-bush is a tongue in his or God's praise!"  
              XXVII 
              A king had reached the end of his days and had no heir to succeed him. He made his
                  will, stating, "You will place the crown of sovereignty upon the head of whatever
                  person first enters the city gate in the morning, and commit the kingdom to his
                  charge." It happened that the first man that presented himself at the city gate was a
                  beggar, who had passed his whole life in scraping broken meat and in patching rags. The
                  ministers of State and nobles of the court fulfilled the conditions of the king's will,
                  and laid the keys of the treasury and citadel at his feet. For a time the dervish governed
                  the kingdom, 'till some of the chiefs of the empire swerved from their allegiance, and the
                  princes of the territories on every side rose in opposition to him, and levied armies for
                  the contest. In short, his troops and subjects were routed and subdued, and several of his
                  provinces taken from him. The dervish was hurt to the soul at these events, when one of
                  his old friends, who had been the companion of his state of poverty, returned from a
                  journey and found him in such dignity. He exclaimed: "Thanksgiving be to a Deity of
                  majesty and glory that lofty fortune succored you and prosperity was your guide, 'till
                  roses issued from your thorns and the thorns were extracted from your feet, and 'till you
                  arrived at this elevated rank! Along with hardship there is ease; or, to sorrow
                    succeeds joy. The plant is at one season in flower and at another withered; the tree
                  is at one time naked and at another clothed with leaves." He said: "O, my dear
                  friend, offer me condolence, for here is no place for congratulation. When you last saw me
                  I had to think of getting a crumb of bread; now I have the cares of a whole kingdom on my
                  head." If the world be adverse, we are the victims of pain; if prosperous, the
                  fettered slaves of affection for it. Amidst this life no calamity is more afflicting than
                  that, whether fortunate or not, the mind is equally disquieted. If thou covet riches, ask
                  not but for contentment, which is an immense treasure. Should a rich man throw money into
                  thy lap, take heed, and do not look upon it as a benefit; for I have often heard from the
                  great and good that the patience of the poor is more meritorious than the gift of the
                  rich. Were King Bahram Ghor to distribute a whole roasted elk, it would not be equal to
                the gift of a locust's leg from an ant."  
              XXVIII 
              A person had a friend who was holding the office of king's divan, or prime minister,
                  and it happened that he had not seen him for some time. Somebody remarked, saying,
                "It is some time since you saw such a gentleman." He answered, "I am no
                  ways anxious about seeing him." One of the divan's people chanced to be present. He
                  asked, "What has happened amiss that you should dislike to visit him?" He
                  replied, "There is no dislike; but my friend, the divan, can be seen at a time when
                  he is out of office, and my idle intrusion might not come amiss." Amidst the State
                  patronage and authority of office they might take umbrage at their acquaintance; but on
                  the day of vexation and loss of place they would impart their mental disquietudes to their
                friends.  
              XXXV 
              They asked a profoundly learned man, saying, "What is your opinion of consecrated
                  bread, or alms taking?" He answered, "If with the view of composing their minds,
                  and promoting their devotions, it is lawful to take it; but if monks collect for the sake
                  of an endowment, it is forbidden. Good and holy men have received the bread of
                  consecration for the sake of religious retirement; and are not recluses, that they may
                receive such bread."  
              XXXVI 
              A dervish came to put up at a place where the master of the house was a gentleman of an
                  hospitable disposition. He had as his guests an assembly of learned and witty men, each of
                  whom was repeating such a jest, or anecdote, as is usual with the facetious. Having
                  traveled across a desert, the dervish was much fatigued, and well-nigh famished. One of
                  the company observed, in the way of pleasantry, "You must also repeat
                  something." The dervish answered, "I am not, like the others, overstocked with
                  learning and wit, nor am I much read in books; and you must be satisfied with my reciting
                  one distich." One and all eagerly cried, "Let us hear it." He said,
                "Hungry as I am, I sit by a table spread with food, like a bachelor at the entrance
                  of a bath full of women!" They applauded what he said, and ordered the tray to be
                  placed before him. The lord of the feast said, "Stay your appetite, my friend! 'till
                  my handmaids can prepare for you some forced meat." He raised his head from the tray,
                  and answered, "Say there is no need for forced meat on my tray, for a crust of plain
                bread is sufficient for one baked as I have been in the desert."  
              XXXVII 
              A disciple complained to his ghostly father, saying, "What can I do, for I am much
                  annoyed by the people, who are interrupting me with their frequent visits, and break in
                  upon my precious hours with their impertinent intrusions." He replied, "To such
                  of them as are poor lend money, and from such as are rich ask some in loan; and neither of
                  them will trouble you again." Let a beggar be the harbinger of an army of Islam, or
                the orthodox, and the infidel will fly his importunity as far as the wall of China.  
              XXXIX 
              A drunken fellow had lain down to sleep on the highway, and was quite overcome with the
                  fumes of intoxication. An abid was passing close by, and looking at him with scorn. The
                  youth raised his head, and said, "Whenever they pass anything shameful they pass
                    it with compassion. Whenever thou beholdest a sinner, hide and bear with his
                    transgressions: Thou, who art aware of them, why not overlook my sins with pity? Turn
                  not away, O reverend sir! from a sinner; but look upon him with compassion. Though in my
                actions I am not a hero, do thou pass by as the heroic would pass me."  
              XL 
              A gang of dissolute vagabonds broke in upon a dervish, used opprobrious language, and
                  beat and ill-used him. In his helplessness he carried his complaint before his ghostly
                  father, and said, "Thus it has befallen me." He replied: "O my son! the
                  patched cloak of dervishes is the garment of resignation; whosoever wears this garb, and
                  can not bear with disappointment, is a hypocrite, and to him our cloth is forbidden.---A
                  vast and deep river is not rendered turbid by throwing into it a stone. That religious man
                  who can be vexed at an injury is as yet a shallow brook.---If thou art subjected to
                  trouble, bear with it; for by forgiveness thou art purified from sin. Seeing, O brother!
                  that we are ultimately to become dust, be humble as the dust, before thou molders into
                dust."  
              XLI 
              Hear what occurred once at Baghdad in a dispute that took place between a roll-up
                  curtain and standard. Covered with the road-dust, and jaded with a march, the standard, in
                  reproach, observed to the curtain: "Thou and I are gentlemen in livery; we are
                  fellow-servants at the court of his majesty. I never enjoy a moment's relief from duty;
                  early and late I am equally marching. Thou hast never experienced any peril or a siege,
                  the heavy sand of the desert or dust of a whirlwind; my foot is most forward in any
                  enterprise. Then why art thou my superior in dignity? Thou art cared for by youths with
                  faces splendid as the moon, and handled by damsels scenting like jasmine; while I am
                  fallen into the hands of raw recruits, am rolled upon our march, and turned upside
                  down." The curtain answered: "I lay my head humble at the threshold, and hold it
                  not up like thine, flaring in the face of heaven! Whoever is thus vainly rearing his crest
                exalts himself only to be humbled."  
              XLII 
              A good and holy man saw a huge and strong fellow, who, having got much enraged, was
                  storming with passion and foaming at the mouth. He asked, "What has happened to this
                  man?" Somebody answered, "Such a one has given him bad names!" He said,
                "This paltry wretch is able to carry a thousand-weight of stone, and can not bear
                  with one light word! Cease to boast of thy strong arm and pretended manhood, infirm as
                  thou art in mind, and mean in spirit. What difference is there between such a man and a
                  woman? Though thou art strong of arm, let thy mouth utter sweet words; it is no proof of
                  courage to thrust thy fist into another man's face.---Though thou art able to tear the
                  scalp off an elephant, if deficient in humanity, thou art no hero. The sons of Adam are
                formed from dust; if not humble as the I dust, they fall short of being men." 
              XLIV 
              A facetious old gentleman of Baghdad gave his daughter in marriage to a shoemaker. The
                  flint-hearted fellow bit so deeply into the damsel's lip that the blood trickled from the
                  wound. Next morning the father found her in this plight; he went up to his son-in-law, and
                  asked him, saying: "Lowborn wretch! what sort of teeth are these that thou shouldst
                  chew her lips as if they were a piece of leather? I speak not in play what I have to say.
                  Lay jesting aside, and take with her thy legal enjoyment.---When once a vicious
                disposition has taken root in the habit, the hand of death can only eradicate it."  
              XLV 
              A doctor of laws had a daughter preciously ugly, and she had reached the age of
                  womanhood; but, notwithstanding her dowry and fortune, nobody seemed inclined to ask her
                  in marriage.---Damask or brocade but add to her deformity when put upon a bride void of
                  symmetry. In short, they were under the necessity of uniting her in the bonds of wedlock
                  to a blind man. They add, that soon after there arrived from Sirandip, or Ceylon, a
                  physician that could restore sight to the blind. They spoke to the law doctor, saying,
                "Why do you not get him to prescribe for your son-in-law?" He answered:
                "Because I am afraid he may recover his sight, and repudiate my daughter; for--- 'the
                Husband of an ugly woman should be blind.'"  
              XLVIII 
              They asked a wise man which was preferable, munificence or courage? He answered,
                "Whoever has munificence has no need of courage." On the tombstone of
                  Bahram-Ghgor was inscribed: "The hand of liberality is stronger than the arm of
                  power.---Hatim Tayi remains not, yet will his exalted name live renowned for generosity to
                  all eternity. Distribute the tithe of thy wealth in alms, for the more the gardener prunes
                his vine the more he adds to his crop of grapes."  
                
              Chapter III 
              On The Preciousness Of Contentment 
              I 
              A mendicant from the west of Africa had taken his station amidst a group of shopkeepers
                  at Aleppo, and was saying: "O lords of plenty! had ye a just sense of equity, and we
                  of contentment, all manner of importunity would cease in this world!" O contentment!
                  do thou make me rich, for without thee there is no wealth. The treasure of patience was
                the choice of Lokman. Whoever has no patience has no wisdom.  
              II 
              There dwelt in Egypt two youths of noble birth, one of whom applied himself to study
                  knowledge, and the other to accumulate wealth. In process of time that became the wisest
                  man of his age, and this King of Egypt. Then was the rich man casting an eye of scorn upon
                  his philosophic brother, and saying, "I have reached a sovereignty, and you remain
                  thus in a state of poverty." He replied: "O brother! I am all the more grateful
                  for the bounty of a Most High God, whose name was glorified, that I have found the
                  heritage of the prophets---namely, wisdom; and you have got the estate of Pharaoh and
                  Haman---that is, the kingdom of Egypt. I am an ernmet, that mankind shall tread under
                  foot; not a hornet, that they shall complain of my sting. How can I sufficiently express
                  my grateful sense of this blessing, that I possess not the means of injuring my fellow
                creatures?"  
              III 
              I heard of a dervish who was consuming in the flame of want, tacking patch after patch
                  upon his ragged garment, and solacing his mind with this couplet: "I can rest content
                  with a dry crust of bread and a coarse woolen frock, for the burden of my own exertion
                  bears lighter than laying myself under obligation to another."---Somebody observed to
                  him, "Why do you sit quiet, while a certain gentleman of this city is so nobly
                  disposed and universally benevolent, that he has girt up his loins in the service of the
                  religious independents, and seated himself by the door of their hearts? Were he apprised
                  of your condition, he would esteem himself obliged, and be happy in the opportunity of
                  relieving it." He said: "Be silent; for it is better to die of want than to
                  expose our necessities before another, as they have remarked: 'Patching a tattered cloak
                  and the consequent treasure of content, is more commendable than petitioning the great for
                  every new garment.'" By my troth, I swear it were equal to the torments of hell to
                enter into paradise through the interest of a neighbor.  
              IV 
              One of the Persian kings sent a skillful physician to attend Mohammed Mustafa, on whom
                  be salutation. He remained some years in the territory of the Arabs; but nobody went to
                  try his skill, or asked him for any medicine. One day he presented himself before the
                  blessed prince of prophets, and complained, saying, "The king had sent me to dispense
                  medicine to your companions; but, 'till this moment, nobody has been so good as to enable
                  me to practice any skill that this your servant may possess." The blessed messenger
                  of God was pleased to answer, saying, "It is a rule with this tribe never to eat
                  'till hard pressed by hunger, and to discontinue their repast while they have yet an
                  appetite." The physician said, "This accounts for their health." Then he
                  kissed the earth of respect and took his leave. The physician will then begin to inculcate
                  temperance, or to extend the finger of indulgence, when from silence his patient might
                  suffer by excess, or his life be endangered by abstinence: of course, the skill of the
                physician is advice, and the patient's regimen and diet yield the fruits of health!  
              V 
              A certain person would be making vows of abstinence and breaking them. At last a
                  reverend gentleman observed to him, "So I understand that you make a practice of
                  eating to excess; and that any restraint on your appetite, namely, this vow, is weaker
                  than a hair, and this voraciousness, as you indulge it, would break an iron chain; but the
                  day must come when it will destroy you." A man was rearing the whelp of a wolf; when
                full grown it tore its patron and master.  
              VI 
              In the annals of Ardashir Babagan it is recorded that he asked an Arabian physician,
                  saying, "What quantity of food ought to be eaten daily?" He replied, "A
                  hundred dirams' weight were sufficient." The king said, "What strength can a man
                  derive from so small a quantity?" The physician replied: "So much can support
                  you; but in whatever you exceed that you must support it.---Eating is for the purpose of
                living, and speaking in praise of God; but thou believest that we live only to eat."  
              VII 
              Two dervishes of Khorassan were fellow-companions on a journey. One was so spare and
                  moderate that he would break his fast only every other night, and the other so robust and
                  intemperate that he ate three meals a day. It happened that they were taken up at the gate
                  of a city on suspicion of being spies, and both together put into a place, the entrance of
                  which was built up with mud. After a fortnight it was discovered that they were innocent,
                  when, on breaking open the door, they found the strong man dead, and the weak one alive
                  and well. They were astonished at this circumstance. A wise man said, "The contrary
                  of this had been strange, for this one was a voracious eater, and not having strength to
                  support a want of food, perished; and that other was abstemious, and being patient,
                  according to his habitual practice, survived it.---When a person is habitually temperate,
                  and a hardship shall cross him, he will get over it with ease; but if he has pampered his
                  body and lived in luxury, and shall get into straitened circumstances, he must
                perish."  
              XI 
              In a battle with the Tartars, a gallant young man was grievously wounded. Somebody said
                  to him, "A certain merchant has a stock of the mummy antidote; if you would ask him,
                  he might perhaps accommodate you with a portion of it." They say that merchant was so
                  notorious for his stinginess, that--- "If, in the place of his loaf of bread, the orb
                  of the sun had been in his wallet, nobody would have seen daylight in the world 'till the
                  day of judgment." The spirited youth replied: "Were I to ask him for this
                  antidote, he might give it, or he might not; and if he did it might cure me, or it might
                  not; at any rate, to ask such a man were itself a deadly poison!" Whatever thou
                  wouldst ask of the mean, in obligation, might add to the body, but would take from the
                  soul.---And philosophers have observed, that were the water of immortality, for example,
                  to be sold at the price of the reputation, a wise man would not buy it, for an honorable
                  death is preferable to a life of infamy.---Wert thou to eat colocynth from the hand of the
                kind-hearted, it would relish better than a sweetmeat from that of the crabbed.  
              XII 
              One of the learned had a large family and small means. He stated his case to a great
                  man, who entertained a favorable opinion of his character. This one turned away from his
                  solicitation, and viewed this prostitution of begging as discreditable with a gentleman of
                  education. If soured by misfortune, present not thyself before a dear friend, for thou may
                  also embitter his pleasure. When thou brings forward a distress, do it with a cheerful and
                  smiling face, for an openness of countenance can never retard business.---They have
                  related that he rose a little in the pension, but sank much in the estimation of the great
                  man. After some days, when he perceived this falling off in his affection, he said: Miserable
                    is that supply of food which thou obtains in the hour of need; The pot is put to boil, but
                    my reputation is bubbled into vapor. ---He added to my means of subsistence, but took
                from my reputation; absolute starving were better than the disgrace of begging."  
              XIII 
              A dervish had a pressing call for money. Somebody told him a certain person is
                  inconceivably rich; were he made aware of your want, he would somehow manage to
                  accommodate it. He said, "I do not know him." The other answered, "I will
                  introduce you"; and having taken his hand, he brought him to that person's dwelling.
                  The dervish beheld a man with a hanging lip, and sitting in sullen discontent. He said
                  nothing, and returned home. His friend asked, "What have you done?" He replied,
                "His gift I gave in exchange for his look: Lay not thy words before a man with a sour
                  face, otherwise thou may be ruffled by his ill-nature. If thou tell the sorrows of thy
                  heart let it be to him in whose countenance thou may be assured of prompt
                consolation."  
              XVI 
              The Prophet Moses, on whom be peace, saw a dervish who had buried his body, in his want
                  of clothes to cover it, in the sand. He said: "O Moses, put up a prayer, that the
                  Most High God would bestow a subsistence upon me, for I am perishing in distress."
                The blessed Moses prayed accordingly, that God on high would succor him. Some days
                afterward, as he was returning from a conference with God on Mount Sinai, he met that
                dervish in the hands of justice, and a mob following him. He asked: "What has
                  befallen this man?" They answered: "He had drunk wine and got into a quarrel,
                  and having killed somebody, they are now going to exact retaliation."---The God who
                  set forth the seven climates of this world assigned to every creature its appropriate lot.
                  Had that wretched cat been gifted with wings, she would not have left one sparrow's egg on
                  the earth. It might happen that were a weak man to get the ability, he would rise and
                domineer over his weak brethren.  
              The blessed Moses acknowledged the wisdom of the Creator of the universe, and
                  confessing his own presumption, repeated this verse of the Qur'an: "Were God to
                  spread abroad his stores of subsistence to servants, verily they would rebel all over the
                  earth": What happened, O vain man! that thou didst precipitate thyself into
                  destruction? Would that the ant might not have the means of flying!---A mean person, when
                  he has got rank and wealth, will bring a storm of blows upon his head. Was not this at
                  last the adage of a philosopher, 'That ant is best disposed of that has no wings.' ---The
                  father is a man of much sweetness of disposition, but the son is full of heat and
                  passions.---That Being, God, who would not make thee rich, must have known thy good better
                than thou could thyself know it.  
              XVII 
              I saw an Arab, who was standing amidst a circle of jewelers at Busrah, and saying:
                "On one occasion I had missed my way in the desert, and having no road-provision
                  left, I had given myself up for lost, when all at once I found a bag of pearls. Never
                  shall I forget that relish and delight, so long as I mistook them for parched wheat; nor
                  that bitterness and disappointment, when I discovered that they were real pearls." In
                  the mouth of the thirsty traveler, amidst parched deserts and moving sands, pearl, or
                  mother-of-pearl, were equally distasteful. To a man without provision, and exhausted in
                the desert, a piece of stone or of gold, in his scrip, is all one.  
              XVIII 
              An Arab, suffering under all the extremity of thirst in the desert, was saying: "Would
                  to God that yet, before I perish, I could but for or day gratify my wish: That a stream of
                  water might dash against my knees, and could fill my leathern flask or stomach with
                  it." In like manner a traveler had got bewildered in the great desert, and had
                  neither provisions nor strength left, yet a few dirhams remained with him in his scrip. He
                  kept wandering about, but could not find the path, and sank under his fatigue. A party of
                  travelers arrived where his body lay; they saw the dirams spread before him, and these
                  verses written in the sand: "Were he possessed of all the gold of Jafier (a famous
                  gold refiner), a man without food could not satisfy his appetite. To a wretched mendicant,
                  parched in the desert, a boiled turnip would relish better than an ingot of virgin
                silver."  
              XIX 
              I had never complained of the vicissitudes of fortune, nor murmured at the ordinances
                  of heaven, excepting on one occasion, that my feet were bare, and I had not wherewithal to
                  shoe them. In this desponding state I entered the metropolitan mosque at Khufah, and there
                  I beheld a man that had no feet. I offered up praise and thanksgiving for God's goodness
                  to myself, and submitted with patience to my want of shoes.---In the eyes of one satiated
                  with meat a roast fowl is less esteemed at his table than a salad; but to him who is
                stinted of food a boiled turnip will relish like a roast fowl.  
              XX 
              A king, attended by a select retinue, had on a sporting excursion during the winter,
                  got at a distance from any of his hunting-seats, and the evening was closing fast, when
                  they espied from afar a peasant's cottage. The king said: "Let us repair thither for
                  the night, that we may shelter ourselves from the inclemency of the weather." One of
                  the courtiers replied: "It would not become the dignity of the sovereign to take
                  refuge in the cottage of a low peasant; we can pitch a tent here and kindle a fire."
                The peasant saw what was passing; he came forward with what refreshments he had at hand,
                and, laying them before the king, kissed the earth of subserviency, and said: "The
                  lofty dignity of the king would not be lowered by this condescension; but these gentlemen
                  did not choose that the condition of a peasant should be exalted." The king was
                  pleased with this speech; and they passed the night at his cottage. In the morning he
                  bestowed an honorary dress and handsome largess upon him. I have heard that the peasant
                  was resting his hand for some paces upon the king's stirrup, and saying: "The state
                  and pomp of the sovereign suffered no degradation by his condescension in becoming a guest
                  at the cottage of a peasant; but the corner of the peasant's cap rose to the level with
                the sun when the shadow of such a monarch as thou art fell upon his head."  
              XXI 
              They tell a story of an importunate mendicant who had amassed much riches. A certain
                  king said: "It seems that you possess immense wealth, and I have a business of some
                  consequence in hand. If you will assist me with a little of it, by way of a loan, when the
                  public revenue is realized I will repay it and thank you to the bargain." He replied:
                "O sire, it would ill become the sublime majesty of the sovereign of the universe to
                  soil the hand of lofty enterprise with the property of such a mendicant as I am, which I
                  have scraped together grain by grain." He said: "There is no occasion to vex
                  yourself, for I mean it for the Tartars, as impurities are suiting for the impure: "They
                    said, 'The compost of a dung-hill is unclean.' We replied, 'That with it we u ill fill up
                    the chinks of a necessary.'" "If the water of a Christian's well is defiled,
                  and we wash a Jew's corpse in it, there is no sin." I have heard that he disobeyed
                  the royal command, questioned its justice, and resisted it with insolence. The king
                  ordered that the exchequer stipulations should be put in force with rigidness and
                  violence. When a business can not be settled with fair words, we must of necessity make
                  use of foul. When a man will not contribute of his own free will, if another enforces him
                he meets his desert.  
              XXII 
              I knew a merchant who had a hundred and fifty camels of burden and forty bondsmen and
                  servants in his train. One night he entertained me at his lodgings in the island of Keish,
                  in the Persian Gulf, and continued for the whole night talking idly, and saying:
                "Such a store of goods I have in Turkestan, and such an assortment of merchandise in
                  Hindustan; this is the mortgage-deed of a certain estate, and this the security bond of a
                  certain individual's concern." Then he would say: "I have a mind to visit
                  Alexandria, the air of which is salubrious; but that can not be, for the Mediterranean Sea
                  is boisterous. O Sadi! I have one more journey in view, and, that once accomplished, I
                  will pass my remaining life in retirement and leave off trade." I asked: "What
                  journey is that?" He replied: "I will carry the sulphur of Persia to Chin,
                  where, I have heard, it will fetch a high price; thence I will take China porcelain to
                  Greece; the brocade of Greece or Venice I will carry to India; and Indian steel I will
                  bring to Aleppo; the glassware of Aleppo I will take to Yemen; and with the bardimani, or
                  striped stuffs, of Yemen I will return to Persia. After that I will give up foreign
                  commerce and settle myself in a warehouse." He went on in this melancholy strain
                  'till he was quite exhausted with speaking. He said: "O Sadi! do you too relate what
                  you have seen and heard." I replied: "Hast thou not heard that in the desert of
                  Ghor as the body of a chief merchant fell exhausted from his camel, he said, 'Either
                  contentment or the dust of the grave will fill the stingy eye of the worldly
                minded.'"  
              XXIV 
              A weak fisherman got a strong fish into his net, but not having the power of mastering
                  it, the fish got the better of him, and, dragging the net from his hand, escaped.---A
                  bondsman went that he might take water from the brook; the brook came to rise and carried
                  off the bondsman. On most occasions the net would bring out the fish; on this occasion the
                  fish escaped, and took away the net. The other fishermen expressed their vexation, and
                  reproached him, saying, "Such a fish came into your net, and you were not able to
                  master it." He replied: "Alas! my brethren, what could be done? It was not my
                  day of fortune, and the fish had in this way another day left it. And they have said:
                  'Unless it be his lot, the fisherman can not catch a fish in the Tigris; and, except it be
                its fate, the fish will not die on the dry shore.'"  
              XXV 
              A person without hands or feet killed a millepede. A good and holy man passed by him at
                  the time, and said: "Glory be to God! notwithstanding the thousand feet he had when
                  his destiny overtook him, he was unable to escape from one destitute of hand or
                  foot."---When the life-plundering foe comes up behind, fate arrests the speed of the
                  swift-going warrior. At the moment when the enemy might approach step by step it were
                useless to bend the kayani, or Parthian bow.  
              XXVI 
              I met a fat blockhead decked in rich apparel, and mounted on an Arab horse, with a
                  turban of fine Egyptian linen on his head. A person said: "O Sadi, how comes it that
                  you see these garments of the learned on this ignorant beast?" I replied: "It is
                a vile epistle which has been written in golden letters:  
                
              "Verily this ass, with the resemblance of a man, Has the carcass of a calf, and
                the voice or bleating of a calf.'" Thou canst not say that this brute appears
                like a man, unless in his garments, turban, and outward form. Examine into all the ways
                and means of his existence, and thou shalt find nothing lawful but the shedding of his
                blood: though a man of noble birth be reduced to poverty, imagine not that his lofty
                dignity can be lowered; and though he may secure his silver threshold with a hasp of gold,
                conclude not that a Jew can be thereby ennobled."  
              XXVII 
              A thief said to a mendicant: "Are you not ashamed when you hold forth your hand to
                  every mean fellow for a barley corn of silver?" He replied: "It is better to
                  hold forth the hand for one grain of silver than to have it cut off for one and a half
                dang."  
              XXIX 
              I saw a dervish who had withdrawn into a cave, shut the door of communication between
                  the world and himself, and with his lofty and independent eye viewed emperors and kings
                  without awe or reverence.---Whoever opens to himself the door of mendacity must continue a
                  beggar 'till the day of his death. Put covetousness aside, and be independent as a prince;
                  the neck of contentment can raise its head erect. One of the sovereigns of those parts
                  sent a message to him, stating: "So far I can rely on the generous disposition of his
                  reverence, that he will one day favor me by partaking of my bread and salt, by becoming my
                  guest." The shaikh, or holy man, consented; for the acceptance of such an invitation
                  accorded with the sunnah, or law and tradition of the prophet. Next day the king went to
                  apologize for the trouble he had caused him. The abid rose from his place, took the king
                  in his arms, showed him much kindness, and was full of his compliments. After he was gone,
                  one of the shaikh's companions asked him, saying: "Was not such condescending
                  kindness as you this day showed the king contrary to what is usual; what does this
                  mean?" He answered: "Have you not heard what they have said: 'It is proper to
                  stand up and administer to him whom thou hast seated on thy carpet, or made thy
                  guest.'" He could so manage that, during his whole life, his ear should not indulge
                  in the music of the tabor, cymbal, and pipe. He could restrain his eyes from enjoying the
                  garden, and gratify his sense of smell without the rose or narcissus. Though he had not a
                  pillow stuffed with down, he could compose himself to rest with a stone under his head;
                  though he had no heart-solacer as the partner of his bed, he could hug himself to sleep
                  with his arms across his breast. If he could not ride an ambling nag, he was content to
                  take his walk on foot; only this grumbling and vile belly he could not keep under, without
                stuffing it with food.  
                
              Chapter IV 
              On The Benefit Of Being Silent 
              I 
              I spoke to one of my friends, saying: "A prudent restraint on my words is on that
                  account advisable, because in conversation there on most occasions occur good and bad; and
                  the eyes of rivals only note what is bad. He replied: "O brother! that is our best
                  rival who does not, or will not, see our good! The malignant brotherhood pass not by the
                virtuous man Without imputing to him what is infamous.  
              To the eye of enmity, virtue appears the ugliest blemish; it is a rose, O Sadi! which
                to the eyes of our rivals seems a thorn. The world-illuminating brilliancy of the fountain
                of the sun, in like manner, appears dim to the eye of the purblind mole."  
              II 
              A merchant happened to lose a thousand dinars. He said to his son: "It will be
                  prudent not to mention this loss to anybody." The son answered: "O father, it is
                  your orders, and I shall not mention it; but communicate the benefit so far, as what the
                  policy may be in keeping it a secret." He said: "That I may not suffer two
                  evils: one, the loss of my money; another, the reproach of my neighbor.---Impart not thy
                  grievances to rivals, for they are glad at heart, while praying, God preserve us; or "There
                  is neither strength nor power, unless it be from God!'" 
              III 
              A sensible youth made vast progress in the arts and sciences, and was of a docile
                  disposition; but however much he frequented the societies of the learned, they never could
                  get him to utter a word. On one occasion his father said: "O my son, why do not you
                  also say what you know on this subject?" He replied: "I am afraid lest they
                  question me upon what I know not, and put me to shame.---Hast thou not heard of a Sufi who
                  was hammering some nails into the sole of his sandal. An officer of cavalry took him by
                  the sleeve, saying, 'Come along, and shoe my horse.'---So long as thou art silent and
                  quiet, nobody will meddle with thy business; but once thou divulges it, be ready with thy
                proofs."  
              IV 
              A man, respectable for his learning, got into a discussion with an atheist; but,
                  failing to convince him, he threw down his shield and fled. A person asked him, "With
                  all your wisdom and address, learning and science, how came you not to controvert an
                  infidel?" He replied: "My learning is the Qur'an, and the traditions and sayings
                  of our holy fathers; but he puts no faith in the articles of our belief, and what good
                  could it do to listen to his blasphemy?" To him whom thou canst not convince by
                revelation or tradition, the best answer is that thou shalt not answer him.  
              VI 
              They have esteemed Sahban Wabil as unrivaled in eloquence, insomuch that he could speak
                  for a year before an assembly, and would not use the same word twice; or should he chance
                  to repeat it, he would give it a different signification; and this is one of the special
                  accomplishments of a courtier.---Though a speech be captivating and sweet, worthy of
                  belief, and meriting applause, yet what thou hast once delivered thou must not repeat, for
                if they eat a sweetmeat once they find that enough.  
              VII 
              I overheard a sage, who was remarking: "Never has anybody acknowledged his own
                  ignorance, except in that person who, while another may be talking, and has not finished
                  what he has to say, will begin speaking: "A speech, O wiseacre! has a beginning and
                  an end; bring not one speech into the middle of another. A man of judgment, discretion,
                and prudence, delivers not his speech 'till he find an interval of silence."  
              VIII 
              Some of the courtiers of Sultan Mahmud asked Husan Maimandi, saying: "What did the
                  king whisper to you today on a certain State affair?" He said: "You are also
                  acquainted with it." They replied: "You are the prime minister; what the king
                  tells you, he does not think proper to communicate to such as we are." He replied:
                "He communicates with me in the confidence that I will not divulge to anybody; then
                  why do you ask me?" A man of sense blabs not, whatever he may come to know; he should
                not make his own head the forfeit of the king's secret.  
              IX 
              I was hesitating about the purchase of a dwelling-house. A Jew said: "I am an old
                  housekeeper in this street: ask the character of this house from me and buy it, for it has
                  no fault." I replied: "True ! only that you are its neighbor. ---Any such house
                  as has thee for its neighbor could scarce be worth ten dirhams of silver; yet it should
                behoove us to hope that after thy death it may fetch a thousand."  
              X 
              A certain poet presented himself before the chief of a gang of robbers, and recited a casidah,
                  or elegy, in his praise. He ordered that they should strip off his clothes, and thrust him
                  from the village. The naked wretch was going away shivering in the cold, and the village
                  dogs were barking at his heels. He stooped to pick up a stone, in order to shy at the
                  dogs, but found the earth frost-bound, and was disappointed. He exclaimed: "What
                  rogues these villagers are, for they let loose their dogs, and tie up their stones!"
                The chief robber saw and overheard him from a window. He smiled at his wit, and, calling
                him near, said: "O learned sir! ask me for a boon." He replied, "I ask for
                  my own garments, if you will vouchsafe to give them. I shall have enough of boons in
                    your suffering me to depart. Mankind expects charity from others; I expect no charity
                  from thee, only do me no injury." The chief robber felt compassion for him. He
                ordered his clothes to be restored, and added to them a robe of fur and sum of money.  
              XIII 
              At a mosque in the city of Sanjar, the capital of Khorassan, a person was volunteering
                  to chant forth the call to prayers with so discordant a note as to drive all that heard
                  him away in disgust. The intendant of that mosque was a just and well-disposed gentleman,
                  who was averse to giving offense to anybody. He said: "O generous youth, there belong
                  to this mosque some muezzins, or criers, of long standing, to each of whom I allow a
                  monthly stipend of five dinars; now I will give you ten to go elsewhere." To this he
                  agreed, and took himself off. After a while he came to the nobleman, and said: "O my
                  lord! you did me an injury when for ten dinars you prevailed upon me to quit this station,
                  for where I went they offered me twenty to remove to another place, but I would not
                  consent." The nobleman smiled and replied: "Take heed, and do not accept them,
                  for they may be content to give you fifty!---No person can with a mattock scrape off the
                  clay from the face of a hard rock in so grating a manner as thy harsh voice is harrowing
                up my soul."  
              XIV 
              A person with a harsh voice was reciting the Qur'an in a loud tone. A good and holy man
                  went up to him, and asked: "What is your monthly stipend?" He answered,
                "Nothing." "Then," added he, "why give yourself so much
                  trouble?" He said: "I am reading for the sake of God." The good and holy
                  man replied: "For God's sake do not reads for if thou chant the Qur'an after this
                manner, thou must cast a shade over the glory of Islam or Muslim orthodoxy."  
                
              Chapter V 
              On Love And Youth 
              I 
              They asked Husan Maimandi: "How comes it that Sultan Mahmud, who has so many
                  handsome bonds women, each of whom is the wonder of the world and most select of the age,
                  entertains not such fondness and affection for any of them as he does for Ayaz, who can
                  boast of no superiority of charms?" He replied: "Whatever makes an impression on
                  the heart seems lovely in the eye. That person of whom the sultan makes choice must be
                  altogether good, though a compendium of vice; but where he is estranged from the favor of
                  the king none of the household will think of courting him." Were a person to view it
                  with a fastidious eye, the form of a Joseph might seem a deformity; but let him look with
                desire on a demon, and he will appear like an angel and cherub.  
              III 
              I saw a parsa, or holy man, so enamored of a lovely person that he had neither
                  fortitude to bear with, nor resolution to declare, his passion; and, however much he was
                  the object of remark and censure, he would not forego this infatuation, and was saying:
                "I quit not my hold on the skirt of thy garment, though thou may verily smite me with
                  a sharp sword. Besides thee I have neither asylum nor defense; if I am to flee, I must
                  take refuge with thee." On one occasion I reproached him, and said: "What is
                  become of your precious reason, that a vile passion should thus master you?" He made
                  a short pause, and replied: "Wherever the king of love came, he left no room for the
                  strong arm of chastity. How can that wretch live undefiled who has fallen in a quagmire up
                to the neck?"  
              IV 
              A certain person had lost his heart and abandoned himself to despair. The object of his
                  desire was not such a dainty that he could gratify his palate with it, or a bird that he
                  could lure it into his net, but a frightful precipice and overwhelming whirlpool.---When
                  thy gold attracts not the charmer's eye, dust or gold is of equal value with thee. His
                  friends admonished him, saying: "Put aside this vain fancy, for multitudes are in the
                  durance and chains of this same passion which you are cherishing." He sighed aloud,
                  and replied: "Say to my friends, Do not admonish me, for my eye is fixed on the wish
                  of her. With strength of wrist and power of shoulders warriors overwhelm their antagonists
                  and charmers their lovers." Nor can it be consistent with the condition of love that
                  any thought of life should divert the heart from affection for its mistress.---Thou, who
                  art the slave of thine own precious self, play false in the affairs of love. If thou canst
                  not make good a passage to thy mistress, it is the duty of a lover to perish in the
                  attempt.---I persist when policy is no longer left me, though the enemy may cover me all
                  over with the wounds of swords and arrows. If I can reach her I will seize her sleeve, or
                at all events proceed and die at her threshold.  
              His kindred, whose business it was to watch over his concerns, and to pity his
                  misfortunes, gave him advice, and put upon him restraints, but all to no good
                  purpose.---The physician is, alas! prescribing bitter-aloes, and his depraved appetite is
                  craving sweetmeats!---Heardest thou what a charmer was saying in a whisper to one who had
                  lost his heart to her: "So long as thou maintains thine own dignity, of what value
                  can my dignity appear in thine eye?" They informed the princess who was the object of
                  his infatuation, saying: "A youth of an amiable disposition and sweet flow of tongue
                  is frequent in his attendance at the top of this plain; and we hear him delivering
                  brilliant speeches and wonderful sallies of wit; it would seem that he has a mystery in
                  his head and a flame in his heart, for he appears to be distractedly in love." The
                  princess was aware that she had become the object of his attachment, and that this
                  whirlwind of calamity was raised by himself, and spurred her horse toward him. Now that
                  the youth saw that it was the princess' intention to approach him, he wept, and said:
                "That personage who inflicted upon me a mortal wound again presented herself before
                  me; perhaps she took compassion upon her own victim." However, kindly she spoke, and
                  asked, saying: "Who are you, and whence come you? what is your name, and what your
                  calling?" The youth was so entirely overwhelmed in the ocean of love and passion that
                  he absolutely could not utter a word: "Could thou in fact repeat the seven Saba, or
                  whole Qur'an by heart, if distracted with love, thou wouldst forget the
                  alphabet?"---the princess continued: " Why do you not answer me? for I too am
                  one of the sect of dervishes, nay, I am their most devoted slave." On the strength of
                  this sympathizing encouragement of his beloved, the youth raised his head amidst the
                  buffeting waves of tempestuous passion, and answered: "It is strange that with thee
                  present I should remain in existence; that after thou camest to talk, I should have speech
                  left me."---This he said, and, uttering a loud groan, surrendered his soul up to
                  God.---No wonder if he died by the door of his beloved's tent; the wonder was, if alive,
                how he could have brought his life back in safety.  
              V 
              A boy at school possessed much loveliness of person and sweetness of conversation; and
                  the master, from the frailty of human nature, was enamored of his blooming skin. Like his
                  other scholars, he would not admonish and correct him, but when he found him in a corner
                  he would whisper in his ear: "I am not, O celestial creature! so occupied with thee,
                  that I am harboring in my mind a thought of myself. Were I to perceive an arrow coming
                  right into it, I could not shut my eye from contemplating thee." On one occasion the
                  boy said: "In like manner, as you inspect my duties, also animadvert on my tendency
                  to vice, in order that if you discern any immorality in my behavior, which has met my own
                  approbation, you can warn me against it, that I may correct it." He replied: "O
                  my child! propose this task to somebody else; for the light in which I view you reflects
                  nothing but virtue." That malignant eye, let it be plucked out in whose sight his
                  virtue can seem vice. Hadst thou but one perfection and seventy faults, the lover could
                discern only that one perfection.  
              VII 
              A person who had not seen his friend for a length of time said to him: "Where were
                  you? for I have been very solicitous about you." He replied, "It is better to be
                  sought after than loathed." Thou hast come late, O intoxicating idol! I shall not in
                  a hurry quit my hold on thy skirt: that mistress whom they see but seldom is at last more
                  desired than she is whom they are cloyed with seeing. The charmer that can bring
                  companions along with her has come to quarrel; for she can not be void of jealousy and
                  discontent: Whenever thou comest to visit me attended with comrades or rivals, Though
                    thou comest in peace, yet thy object is hostile. For one single moment that my
                  mistress associated with a rival, it went well-nigh to slay me with jealousy. Smiling, she
                  replied: "O Sadi! I am the torch of the assembly; what is it to me if the moth
                consume itself?"  
              VIII 
              In former times, I recollect, a friend and I were associating together like two kernels
                  within one almond shell. I happened unexpectedly to go on a journey. After some time, when
                  I was returned, he began to chide me, saying: "During this long interval you never
                  sent me a messenger." I replied: "It vexed me to think that the eyes of a
                  courier should be enlightened by your countenance, whilst I was debarred that
                  happiness.---Tell my old charmer not to impose a vow upon me with her tongue; for I would
                  not repent, were she to attempt it with a sword. Envy stings me to the quick, lest another
                  should be satiated with beholding thee, 'till I recollect myself, and say: Nobody can have
                a satiety of that!"  
              IX 
              I saw a learned gentleman the captive of attachment for a certain person, and the
                  victim of his reproach; and he would suffer much violence, and bear it with great
                  patience. On one occasion I said, by way of admonition: "I know that in your
                  attachment for this person you have no bad object, and that this friendship rests not on
                  any criminal design; yet, under this interpretation, it accords not with the dignity of
                  the learned to expose yourself to calumny, and put up with the rudeness of the
                  rabble." He replied: "O my friend, withdraw the hand of reproach from the skirt
                  of my fatality, for I have frequently reflected on this advice which you offer me, and
                  find it easier to suffer contumely on his account than to forego his company; and
                  philosophers have said: 'It is less arduous to persist in the labor of courting than to
                  restrain the eye from contemplating a beloved object.'---Whoever devotes his heart to a
                  soul deluder puts his beard of reputation into the hands of another. That person, without
                  whom thou canst not exist, if he do thee a violence, thou must bear it. The antelope, that
                  is led by a string, can not bound from this side to that. One day I asked a compact of my
                  mistress; how often have I since that day craved her forgiveness! A lover exacts not terms
                  of his charmer; I relinquished my heart to whatever she desired me, whether to call me up
                  to her with kindness, or drive me from her with harshness she knows best, or it is her
                pleasure."  
              X 
              In my early youth such an event (as you know) will come to pass. I held a mystery and
                  intercourse with a young person, because he had a pipe of exquisite melody, and a form
                  silver bright as the full moon.--- "He is sipping the fountain of immortality, who
                  may taste the down of his cheek; and he is eating a sweetmeat, who can fancy the sugar of
                  his lips." It happened that something in his behavior having displeased me, I
                  withdrew the skirt of communication, and removed the seal of my affection from him, and
                  said: "Go, and take what course best suits thee; thou regard not my counsel, follow
                  thine own." I overheard him as he was going, and saying: "If the bat does not
                  relish the company of the sun, the all-current brilliancy of that luminary can suffer no
                  diminution." He so expressed himself and departed, and his vagabond condition much
                  distressed me: The opportunity of enjoyment was lost, And a man is insensible to the
                  relish of prosperity 'till he has tasted adversity: return and slay me, for to die
                  before thy face were far more pleasant than to survive in thy absence.  
              
              But, thanksgiving and praise to the Almighty, he did not return 'till after some
                      interval, when that melodious pipe of David was cracked, and that handsome form of Joseph
                      in its wane; when that apple his chin was overgrown with hair, like a quince, and the
                      all-current luster of his charms tarnished. He expected me to fold him in my arms; but I
                      took myself aside and said: "When the down of loveliness flourished on thy cheek,
                      thou drove the lord of thy attractions from thy sight; now thou hast come to court his
                      peace when thy face is thick set with fathahs and zammahs, or the bristles
                      of a beard.---The verdant foliage of thy spring is turned yellow; place not thy kettle on
                      my grate, for its fire is cooled. How long wilt thou display this pomp and vanity; hope
                      thou to regain thy former dominion? Make thy court to such as desire thee, sport thy airs
                      on such as will hire thee.---The verdure of the garden, they have told us, is charming;
                      that person (Sadi) knows it who is relating that story; or, in other words, that the
                      fresh-shooting down on their charmers' cheeks is what the hearts of their admirers chiefly
                      covet.---Thy garden is like a bed of chives: the more thou crop it, the more it will
                      shoot.---Last year thou didst depart smooth as an antelope, today thou art returned
                      bearded like a pard. Sadi admires the fresh-shooting down, not when each hair is stiff as
                      a packing-needle.--Whether thou hast patience with thy beard or weed it from thy face,
                      this happy season of youth must come to a conclusion. Had I the same command of life as
                      thou hast of beard, it should not escape me 'till doomsday." I asked him and said:
                "What has become of the beauty of thy countenance, that a beard has sprung up round
                      the orb of the moon?" He answered: "I know not what has befallen my face, unless
                it has put on black to mourn its departed charms."  
              XII 
              They shut up a parrot in the same cage with a crow. The parrot was affronted at his
                ugly look, and said: "What an odious visage is this, a hideous figure; what an
                accursed appearance, and ungracious demeanor! Would to God, O raven of the desert! We
                  were wide apart as the east is from the west:  
              The serenity of his peaceful day would change into the gloom of night, who on issuing
                  forth in the morning might cross thy aspect. An ill-conditioned wretch like thyself should
                  be thy companion; but where could we find such another in the world?" But what is
                  more strange, the crow was also out of all patience, and vexed to the soul at the society
                  of the parrot. Bewailing his misfortune, he was railing at the revolutions of the skies;
                  and, wringing the hands of chagrin, was lamenting his condition, and saying: "What an
                  unpropitious fate is this; what ill-luck, and untoward fortune! Could they any way suit
                  the dignity of me, who would in my day strut with my fellow-crows along the wall of a
                  garden.---It were durance sufficient for a good and holy man that he should be made the
                  companion of the wicked.---What sin have I committed that my stars in retribution of it
                  have linked me in the chain of companionship, and immured me in the dungeon of calamity,
                  with a conceited blockhead, and good-for-nothing babbler?---Nobody will approach the foot
                  of a wall on which they have painted thy portrait; wert thou to get a residence in
                  paradise, others would go in preference to hell." I have introduced this parable to
                  show that however much learned men despise the ignorant, these are a hundredfold more
                  scornful of the learned.---A zahid, or holy man, fell in company with some
                  wandering minstrels. One of them, a charmer of Balkh, said to him: "If thou art
                  displeased with us, do not look sour, for thou art already sufficiently offensive. ---An
                  assemblage is formed of roses and tulips, and thou art stuck up amidst them like a
                  withered stalk; like an opposing storm, and a chilling winter blast; like a ball of snow,
                or lump of ice."  
              XIII 
              I had an associate, who was for years the companion of my travels, partook of the same
                  bread and salt, and enjoyed the many rights of a confirmed friendship. At last, on some
                  trifling advantage, he gave me cause of umbrage, and our intimacy ceased. And
                  notwithstanding all this, there was a hankering of good-will on both sides; in consequence
                  of which I heard that he was one day reciting in a certain assembly these two couplets of
                  my writings: "When my idol, or mistress, is approaching me with her tantalizing
                    smiles, She is sprinkling more salt upon my smarting sores. How fortunate were the tips of
                    her ringlets to come into my hand, Like the sleeve of the generous in the hands of
                    dervishes." This society of his friends bore testimony, and gave applause, not to
                  the beauty of this sentiment, but to the liberality of his own disposition in quoting it;
                  while he had himself been extravagant in his encomiums, regretted the demise of our former
                  attachment, and confessed how much he was to blame. I was made aware that he too was
                  desirous of a reconciliation; and, having sent him these couplets, made my peace.---
                "Was there not a treaty of good faith between us, and didst not thou commence
                  hostilities, and violate the compact? I relinquished all manner of society, and plighted
                  my heart to thee; for I did not suspect that thou wouldst have so readily changed. If it
                still be thy wish to renew our peace, return, and be more dear to me than ever."  
              XIV 
              A man had a beautiful wife, who died; but the mother, a decrepit old dotard, remained a
                  fixture in his house, because of the dowry. He was teased to death by her company; but,
                  from the circumstance of the dowry, he had no remedy. In the meantime some of his friends
                  having come to comfort him, one of them asked: "How is it with you, since the loss of
                  that dear friend?" He answered: "The absence of my wife is not so intolerable as
                  the presence of her mother.---They plucked the rose, and left me the thorn; they plundered
                  the treasure, and let the snake remain. To have one eye pierced with a spear were more
                  tolerable than to see the face of an enemy. It were better to break with a thousand
                friends than to put up with one rival."  
              XV 
              In my youth I recollect I was passing through a street, and caught a glimpse of a
                  moon-like charmer during the dog-days, when their heat was drying up the moisture of the
                  mouth, and the samum, or desert hot-wind, melting the marrow of the bones. From the
                  weakness of human nature I was unable to withstand the darting rays of a noon-tide sun,
                  and took refuge under the shadow of a wall, hopeful that somebody would relieve me from
                  the oppressive heat of summer, and quench the fire of my thirst with a draught of water.
                  All at once I beheld a luminary in the shadowed portico of a mansion, so splendid an
                  object that the tongue of eloquence falls short in summing up its loveliness; such as the
                  day dawning upon a dark night, or the fountain of immortality issuing from chaos. She held
                  in her hand a goblet of snow-cooled water, into which she dropped some sugar, and tempered
                  it with spirit of wine; but I know not whether she scented it with attar, or sprinkled it
                  with a few blossoms from her own rosy cheeks. In short, I received the beverage from her
                  idol-fair hand; and, having drunk it off, found myself restored to a new life. "Such
                    is not my parching thirst that it is to be quenched With the limpid element of water, were
                    I to swallow it in oceans." Joy to that happy aspect whose eye can every morning
                  contemplate such a countenance as thine. A person intoxicated with wine lies giddy and
                  awake half the night; but if intoxicated with the cupbearer (God), the day of judgment
                must be his dawn or morning."  
              XVI 
              In the year that Sultan Mohammed Khowarazm-Shah had for some political reason chosen to
                  make peace with the Wing of Khota, I entered the metropolitan mosque at Kashghar, and met
                  a youth incomparably lovely, and exquisitely handsome; such as they have mentioned in
                  resemblance of him: "Thy master instructed thee in every bold and captivating grace;
                  he taught thee coquetry and confidence, tyranny and violence." I have seen no mortal
                  with such a form and temper, stateliness and manner; perhaps he learned these fascinating
                  ways from an angel. He held the introduction of the Zamakhshari Arabic grammar in his
                  hand, and was repeating:--- "Zaraba Zaidun Amranwa--Zaid beat Amru and is the
                  assailant of Amru." I said: "O my son! the Khowarazm and Khatayi sovereigns have
                  made peace, and does war thus subsist between Zaid and Amru?" He smiled, and asked me
                  the place of my nativity. I answered: "The territory of Shiraz." He said:
                "Do you recollect any of Sadi's compositions?" I replied: "I am enamored
                    with the reader of the syntax, Who, taking offense, assails me in like manner as Zaid does
                    Amru. And Zaid, when read Zaidin, can not raise his head; And how canst thou give a zammah
                    to a word accented with a kasrah?" He reflected a little within himself, and
                  said: "In these parts we have much of Sadi's compositions in the Persian language; if
                  you will speak in that dialect we shall more readily comprehend you, for 'You should
                    address mankind according to their capacities.'" I replied: "Whilst thy
                  passion was that of studying grammar, all trace of reason was erased from our hearts. Yes!
                  the lover's heart is fallen a prey to thy snare: we are occupied about thee, and thou art
                  taken up with Amru and Zaid." On the morrow, which had been fixed on as the period of
                  our stay, some of my fellow-travelers had perhaps told him such a one is Sadi; for I saw
                  that he came running up, and expressed his affection and regret, saying: "Why did you
                  not during all this time tell us that a certain person is Sadi, that I might have shown my
                  gratitude by offering my service to your reverence?" I answered: "In thy
                  presence I can not even say that I am I!" ---He said: "How good it were if you
                  would tarry here for a few days, that we might devote ourselves to your service." I
                  replied: "That can not be, as this adventure will explain to you.---In the hilly
                  region I saw a great and holy man, who was content in living retired from the world in a
                  cavern. I said: 'Why dost thou not come into the city, that thy heart might be relieved
                  from a load of servitude?' He replied: 'In it there dwell some wonderful and angel-faced
                  charmers, and where the path is miry, elephants may find it slippery.'---Having delivered
                  this speech, we kissed each other's head and face, and took our leaves.---What profits it
                  to kiss our mistress's cheek, and with the same breath to bid her adieu? Thou mightest say
                  that the apple had taken leave of its friends by having this cheek red and that cheek
                  yellow: "Were I not to die of grief on that day I say farewell, Thou wouldst
                  charge me with being insincere in my attachments." 
              XVII 
              A ragged dervish accompanied us along with the caravan for Hijaz, and a certain Arab
                  prince presented him with a hundred dinars for the support of his family. Suddenly a gang
                  of Khafachah robbers attacked the caravan, and completely stripped it. The merchants set
                  up a weeping and wailing, and made much useless lamentation and complaint.
                  ---"Whether thou supplicates them, or whether thou complains, the robbers will not
                  return thee their plunder":--- all but that ragged wretch, who stood collected within
                  himself, and unmoved by this adventure. I said: "Perhaps they did not plunder you of
                  that money?" He replied: "Yes, they took it; but I was not so fond of my pet as
                  to break my heart at parting with it. We should not fix our heart so on any thing or being
                  as to find any difficulty in removing it." I said: "What you have remarked
                  corresponds precisely with what once befell myself; for in my juvenile days I took a
                  liking to a young man, and so sincere was my attachment that the Kaaba, or fane, of my eye
                  was his perfect beauty, and the profit of this life's traffic his much-coveted
                  society.---Perhaps the angels might in paradise, otherwise no living form can on this
                  earth display such a loveliness of person. By friendship I swear that after his demise all
                loving intercourse is forbidden; for no human emanation can stand a comparison with him.  
              "All at once the foot of his existence stumbled at the grave of annihilation; and
                the sigh of separation burst from the dwelling of his family. For many days I sat a
                fixture at his tomb, and, of the many dirges I composed upon his demise, this is one: "On
                  that day, when thy foot was pierced with the thorn of death, Would to God the hand of fate
                  had cloven my head with the sword of destruction, That my eyes might not this day have
                  witnessed the world without thee. Such am I, seated at the head of thy dust, As the ashes
                  are seated on my own: Whoever could not take his rest and sleep 'till they first had
                  spread a bed of roses and narcissuses for him: The whirlwind of the sky has scattered the
                  roses of his cheek, And brambles and thorns are shooting from his grave.' "After
                my separation from him I came to a steady and firm determination that during my remaining
                life I would fold up the carpet of enjoyment, and never re-enter the gay circle of
                society.---Were it not for the dread of its waves, much would be the profits of a voyage
                at sea; were it not for the vexation of the thorn, charming might be the society of the
                rose. Yesterday I was walking stately as a peacock in the garden of enjoyment; today I am
                writhing like a snake from the absence of my mistress."  
              XVIII 
              To a certain king of Arabia they were relating the story of Laila and Mujnun, and his
                  insane state, saying: "Notwithstanding his knowledge and wisdom, he has turned his
                  face toward the desert, and abandoned himself to distraction." The king ordered that
                  they bring him into his presence; and he reproved him, and spoke, saying: "What have
                  you seen unworthy in the noble nature of man that you should assume the manners of a
                  brute, and forsake the enjoyment of human society?" Mujnun wept and answered: "Many
                    of my friends reproach me for my love of her, namely Laila. Alas! that they could one day
                    see her, that my excuse might be manifest for me! Would to God that such as blame me
                  could behold thy face, O thou ravisher of hearts! that at the sight of thee they might,
                  from inadvertency, cut their own fingers instead of the orange in their hands.---Then
                  might the truth of the reality bear testimony against the semblance of fiction, 'what
                    manner of person that was for whose sake you were upbraiding me." The king
                  resolved within himself on viewing in person the charms of Laila, that he might be able to
                  judge what her form could be which had caused all this misery, and ordered her to be
                  produced in his presence. Having searched through the Arab tribes, they discovered and
                  presented her before the king in the courtyard of his seraglio. He viewed her figure, and
                  beheld a person of a tawny complexion and feeble frame of body. She appeared to him in a
                  contemptible light, inasmuch as the lowest menial in his harem, or seraglio, surpassed her
                  in beauty and excelled her in elegance. Mujnun, in his sagacity, penetrated what was
                  passing in the royal mind, and said: 'It would behoove you, O king, to contemplate the
                  charms of Laila through the wicket of a Mujnun's eye, in order that the miracle of such a
                  spectacle might be illustrated to you. Thou canst have no fellow-feeling for my disorder;
                  a companion to suit me must have the self-same malady, that I may sit by him the livelong
                  day repeating my tale; for by rubbing two pieces of dry firewood one upon another they
                  will burn all the brighter: "Had that grove of verdant reeds heard the murmurings
                    of love Which in detail of my mistress's story have passed through my ear, It would
                    somehow have sympathized in my pain. Tell it, O my friends, to such as are ignorant of
                    love; Would ye could be aware of what wrings me to the soul: the anguish of a wound is
                  not known to the hale and sound; we must detail our aches only to a fellow sufferer It
                  were idle to talk of a hornet to him who has never during his life smarted from its sting.
                  'till thy condition may in some sort resemble mine, my state will seem to thee an idle
                  fable. Compare not my pain with that of another man; he holds salt in his hand, but I hold
                it on a wounded limb."  
              XX 
              There was a handsome and well-disposed young man, who was embarked in a vessel with a
                  lovely damsel. I have read that, sailing on the mighty deep, they fell together into a
                  whirlpool. When the pilot came to offer him assistance, saying: "God forbid that he
                  should perish in that distress," he was answering from the midst of that overwhelming
                  vortex: "Leave me, and take the hand of my beloved!" The whole world admired him
                  for this speech which, as he was expiring, he was heard to make. Learn not the tale of
                  love from that faithless wretch who can neglect his beloved when exposed to danger. In
                  this manner ended the lives of those lovers. Listen to what has happened, that you may
                  understand; for Sadi knows the ways and forms of courtship as well as the Tazi, or modern
                  Arabic, is understood at Baghdad. Devote your whole heart to the heart-consoler you have
                  chosen (namely, God), and let your eyes be shut to the whole world beside. Were Laila and
                Mujnun to return into life, they might read the history of love in this chapter.  
                
              Chapter VI 
              Of Imbecility And Old Age 
              I 
              In the metropolitan mosque at Damascus I was engaged in a disputation with some learned
                  men, when a youth suddenly entered the door, and said: "Does any of you understand
                  the Persian language?" They directed him to me, and I answered: "It is
                true." He continued: "An old man of a 
              hundred and fifty years of age is in the agonies of death, and is uttering something in
                  the Persian language, which we do not understand. If you will have the goodness to go to
                  him you may get rewarded; for he possibly may be dictating his will." When I sat down
                  by his bedside I heard him reciting: " I said, I will enjoy myself for a few moments.
                  Alas! that my soul took the path of departure. Alas! at the variegated table of life I
                  partook of a few mouthfuls, and the fates said, enough!" I explained the
                  signification of these lines in Arabic to the Syrians. They were astonished that, at his
                  advanced time of life, he should express himself so solicitous about a worldly existence.
                  I asked him: "How do you now find yourself?" He replied: "What shall I
                  say?---Hast thou never witnessed what torture that man suffers from whose jaw they are
                  extracting a tooth? Fancy to thyself how excruciating is his pain from whose precious body
                  they are tearing an existence!" I said: "Banish all thoughts of death from your
                  mind, and let not doubt undermine your constitution; for the Greek philosophers have
                  remarked that although our temperaments are vigorous, that is no proof of a long life; and
                  that although our sickness is dangerous, that is no positive sign of immediate
                  dissolution. If you will give me leave, I will call in a physician to prescribe some
                  medicine that may cure you." He replied: "Alas! alas! The landlord thinks of
                  refreshing the paintings of his hall, and the house is tottering to its foundation. The
                  physician smites the hands of despair when he sees the aged fallen in pieces like a
                  potsherd; the old man bemoans himself in the agony of death while the old attendant nurse
                  is anointing him with sandalwood. When the equipoise of the temperament is overset,
                neither amulets nor medicaments can do any good."  
              III 
              In the territory of Diarbekr, or Mesopotamia, I was the guest of an old man, who was
                  very rich, and had a handsome son. One night he told a story, saying: "During my
                  whole life I never had any child but this boy. And in this valley a certain tree is a
                  place of pilgrimage, where people go to supplicate their wants; and many was the night
                  that I have besought God at the foot of that tree before he would bestow upon me this
                  boy." I have heard that the son was also whispering his companions, and saying:
                "How happy I should be if I could discover the site of that tree, in order that I
                  might pray for the death of my father." The gentleman was rejoicing and saying:
                "What a sensible youth is my son!" and the boy was complaining and crying:
                "What a tedious old dotard is my father!" Many years are passing over thy head,
                  during which thou didst not visit thy father's tomb. What pious oblation didst thou make
                to the manes of a parent that thou shouldst expect so much from thy son?  
              IV 
              Urged one day by the pride of youthful vanity, I had made a forced march, and in the
                  evening found myself exhausted at the bottom of an acclivity. A feeble old man, who had
                  deliberately followed the pace of the caravan, came up to me and said: "How come you
                  to lie down here? Get up; this is no fit place to rest." I replied: "How can I
                  proceed, who have not a foot to stand on?" He said: "Have you not heard what the
                  prudent have remarked? 'Going on, and halting, is better than running ahead and breaking
                  down! 'Ye who wish to reach the end of your journey, hurry not on; practice my advice, and
                  learn deliberation. The Arab horse makes a few stretches at full speed, and is broken
                  down; while the camel, at its deliberate pace, travels on night and day, and gets to the
                end of his journey."  
              V 
              An active, merry, cheerful, and sweet-spoken youth was for a length of time in the
                  circle of my society, whose heart had never known sorrow, nor his lip ceased from being on
                  a smile. An age had passed, during which we had not chanced to meet. When I next saw him
                  he had taken to himself a wife, and got a family; and the root of his enjoyment was torn
                  up, and the rose of his mirth blasted. I asked him: "How is this?" He replied:
                "Since I became a father of children, I ceased to play the child.---Now thou art old,
                  relinquish childishness, and leave it to the young to indulge in play and merriment.
                  Expect not the sprightliness of youth from the aged; for the stream that ran by can never
                  return. Now that the corn is ripe for the sickle, it rears not its head as when green and
                  shooting. The season of youth has slipped through my hands; alas! when I think on those
                  heart-exhilarating days! The lion has lost the sturdy grasp of his paw: I must now put up,
                  like a lynx, with a bit of cheese. An old woman had stained her gray locks black. I said
                  to her: O, my antiquated dame! thy hair I admit thou canst turn dark by art, but thou
                never canst make thy crooked back straight."  
              VI 
              One day, in the perverseness of youth, I spoke with asperity to my mother. Vexed at
                  heart, she sat down in a corner, and with tears in her eyes was saying: "You have
                  perhaps forgot the days of infancy, that you are speaking to me thus harshly.---How well
                  did an old woman observe to her own son, when she saw him powerful as a tiger, and
                  formidable as an elephant: 'Could thou call to mind those days of thy infancy when
                  helpless thou wouldst cling to this my bosom, thou wouldst not thus assail me with savage
                fury, now thou art a lion-like hero, and I am a poor old woman.'"  
              VII 
              A rich miser had a son who was grievously sick. His well-wishers and friends spoke to
                  him, saying: "It were proper that you either read the Qur'an throughout or offer an
                  animal in sacrifice, in order that the Most High God may restore him to health."
                After a short reflection within himself he answered, " It is better to read the
                  Qur'an, which is ready at hand; and my herds are at a distance." A good and holy man
                  heard this and remarked: "He makes choice of the reading part because the Qur'an
                  slips glibly over the tongue, but his money is to be wrung from the soul of him. Fie upon
                  that readiness to bow the head in prayer; would that the hand of charity could accompany
                  it! In bestowing a dinar he will stick like an ass in the mire; but ask him to read the
                Al-hamdi, or first chapter of the Qur'an, and he will recite it a hundred times."  
                
              Chapter VII 
              Of The Impressions Of Education 
              I 
              A certain nobleman had a dunce of a son. He sent him to a learned man, saying:
                "Verily you will give instruction to this youth, peradventure he may become a
                  rational being." He continued to give him lessons for some time, but they made no
                  impression upon him, when he sent a message to the father, saying: "This son is not
                  getting wise, and he has well-nigh made me a fool!" Where the innate capacity is
                  good, education may make an impression upon it; but no furbisher knows how to give a
                  polish to iron which is of a bad temper. Wash a dog seven times in the ocean, and so long
                  as he is wet he is all the filthier. Were they to take the ass of Jesus to Mecca, on his
                return from that pilgrimage he would still be an ass.  
              II 
              A philosopher was exhorting his children and saying: "O emanations of my soul,
                  acquire knowledge, as no reliance can be placed on worldly riches and possessions, for
                  once you leave home rank is of no use, and gold and silver on a journey are exposed to the
                  risk either of thieves plundering them at once, or of the owner wasting them by degrees;
                  but knowledge is a perennial spring and ever-during fortune. Were a professional man to
                  lose his fortune, he need not feel regret, for his knowledge is of itself a mine of
                  wealth. Wherever he may sojourn the learned man will meet respect, and be ushered into the
                  upper seat, whilst the ignorant man must put up with offal and suffer want.---If thou
                  covet the paternal heritage, acquire thy father's knowledge, for this thy father's wealth
                  thou may squander in ten days. After having been in authority, it is hard to obey; after
                  having been fondled with caresses, to put up with men's violence.---There once occurred an
                  insurrection in Syria, and everybody forsook his former peaceful abode. The sons of
                  peasants, who were men of learning, came to be employed as the ministers of kings; and the
                  children of noblemen, of bankrupt understandings, went a begging from village to
                village."  
              III 
              A certain learned man was superintending the education of a king's son; and he was
                  chastising him without mercy, and reproving him with asperity. The boy, out of all
                  patience, complained to the king his father, and laid bare before him his much-bruised
                  body. The king was much offended, and sending for the master, said: "You do not treat
                  the children of my meanest subject with the harshness and cruelty you do my boy; what do
                  you mean by this?" He replied: "To think before they speak, and to deliberate
                  before they act, are duties incumbent upon all mankind, and more immediately upon kings;
                  because whatever may drop from their hands and tongue, the special deed or word will
                  somehow become the subject of public animadversion; whereas any act or remark of the
                  commonalty attracts not such notice.---Let a dervish, or poor man, commit a hundred
                  indiscretions, and his companions will not notice one out of the hundred; and let a king
                  but utter one foolish word, and it will be echoed from kingdom to kingdom: therefore in
                  forming the morals of young princes, more pains are to be taken than with the sons of the
                  vulgar. Whoever was not taught good manners in his boyhood, fortune will forsake him when
                  he becomes a man. Thou may bend the green bough as thou likes; but let it once get dry,
                  and it will require heat to straighten it: "Verily thou may bend the tender
                    branch, But it were labor lost to attempt making straight a crooked billet.'" The
                  king greatly approved of this ingenious detail, and the wholesome course of discipline of
                  the learned doctor; and, bestowing upon him a dress and largess, raised him one step in
                his rank as a nobleman!  
              VI 
              A king gave his son into the charge of a preceptor, and said: "This is your child,
                  educate him as you would one of your own." For some years he labored in teaching him,
                  but to no good purpose; whilst the sons of the preceptor excelled in eloquence and
                  knowledge. The king blamed the learned man, and remonstrated with him, saying: "You
                  have violated your trust, and infringed the terms of your engagement." He replied:
                "O king, the education is the same, but their capacities are different!" Though
                  silver and gold are extracted from stones, yet it is not in every stone that gold and
                  silver are found. The Sohail, or star Canopus, is shedding his rays all over the globe. In
                  one place he produces common leather, in another, or in Yemen, that called Adim, or
                perfumed.  
              VII 
              I heard a certain learned senior observing to a disciple: "If the sons of Adam
                  were as solicitous after Providence, or God, as they are after their means of sustenance,
                  their places in Paradise would surpass those of the angels." God did not overlook
                  thee in that state when thou wert a senseless embryo in thy mother's womb. He bestowed
                  upon thee a soul, reason, temper, intellect, symmetry, speech, judgment, understanding,
                  and reflection. He accommodated thy hands with ten fingers, and suspended two arms from
                  thy shoulders. Canst thou now suppose, O good-for-nothing wretch, that he will forget to
                provide thy daily bread?  
              VIII 
              I observed an Arab who was informing his son: "O my child, God will ask thee on
                  the day of judgment: What hast thou done in this life? But he will not inquire of thee:
                  Whence didst thou derive thy origin?" That is, they (or God) will ask, saying:
                "What are your works?" But he will not question you, saying: "Who is your
                  father?" The covering of the Kaaba at Mecca, which the pilgrims kiss from devotion,
                  is not prized from its being the fabric of a silk-worm; for a while it associated with a
                venerable friend, and became, in consequence, venerable like him.  
              IX 
              They have related in the books of philosophers that scorpions are not brought forth
                  according to the common course of nature, as other animals are, but that they eat their
                  way through their mothers' wombs, tear open their bellies and thus make themselves a
                  passage into the world; and that the fragments of skin which we find in scorpions' holes
                  corroborate this fact. On one occasion I was stating this strange event to a good and
                  great man, when he answered: "My heart is bearing testimony to the truth of this
                  remark; nor can it be otherwise, for as they have thus behaved toward their parents in
                  their youth, so they are approved and beloved in their riper years." On his death-bed
                  a father exhorted his son, saying: "O generous youth, keep in mind this maxim:
                  'Whoever is ungrateful to his own kindred can not hope that fortune shall befriend
                him.'"  
              X 
              They asked a scorpion: "Why do you not make your appearance during the
                  winter?" It answered: "What is my character in the summer that I should come
                abroad also in the winter?"  
              XIII 
              One year a dissension arose among the foot-travelers on a pilgrimage to Mecca, and the
                  author (Sadi) was also a pedestrian among them. In truth, we fell head and ears together,
                  and accusation and recrimination were bandied from all sides. I overheard a kajawah,
                  or gentleman, riding on one side of a camel-litter, observing to his adil, or
                  opposite companion: "How strange that the ivory piyadah, or pawns, on reaching
                  the top of the shatranj, or chess-board, become fazzin, or queens; that is, they get rank,
                  or become better than they were; and the piyadah, or pawns, of the pilgrimage---that is,
                  our foot-pilgrims---have crossed the desert and become worse." Say from me to that
                  hadji, or pilgrim, the pest of his fellow-pilgrims, that he lacerates the skin of mankind
                  by his contention. Thou art not a real pilgrim, but that meek camel is one who is feeding
                on thorns and patient under its burden.  
              XIV 
              A Hindu, or Indian, was teaching the art of playing off fireworks. A philosopher
                  observed to him: "This is an unfit sport for you, whose dwelling is made of
                  straw." Utter not a word 'till thou know that it is the mirror of what is correct;
                and do not put a question where thou know that the answer must be unfavorable.  
              XV 
              A fellow had a complaint in his eyes, and went to a horse doctor, saying:
                "Prescribe something for me." The doctor of horses applied to his eyes what he
                  was in the habit of applying to the eyes of quadrupeds, and the man became blind. They
                  carried their complaint before the hakim, or judge. He decreed: "This man has no
                  redress, for had he not been an ass he would not have applied to a horse or ass
                  doctor!" The moral of this apologue is, that whoever doth employ an inexperienced
                  person on an affair of importance, besides being brought to shame, he will incur from the
                  wise the imputation of a weak mind. A prudent man, with an enlightened understanding,
                  entrusts not affairs of consequence to one of mean capacity. The plaiter of mats,
                notwithstanding he be a weaver, they would not employ in a silk manufactory.  
              XVI 
              A certain great Imaan had a worthy son, and he died. They asked him, saying: "What
                  shall we inscribe upon the urn at his tomb?" He replied: "Verses of the holy
                  Qur'an are of such superior reverence and dignity that they should not be written in
                  places where time might efface, mankind tread upon, or dogs defile them; yet, if an
                epitaph be necessary, let these two couplets suffice: I said:  
                
              "Alas! how grateful it was proving to my heart, So long as the verdure of thy
                existence might flourish in the garden.' He replied: 'O my friend, have patience 'till
                the return of the spring, and thou may again see roses blossoming on my bosom, or shooting
                from my dust.'"  
              XVII 
              A holy man was passing by a wealthy personage's mansion, and saw him with a slave tied
                  up by the hands and feet, and giving him chastisement. He said: "O my son! God
                  Almighty has made a creature like yourself subject to your command, and has given you a
                  superiority over him. Render thanksgiving to the Most High Judge, and deal not with him so
                  savagely; lest hereafter, on the day of judgment, he may prove the more worthy of the two,
                  and you be put to shame.---Be not so enraged with thy bondsman; torture not his body, nor
                  harrow up his heart. Thou might buy him for ten dinars, but hadst not after all the power
                  of creating him.---To what length will this authority, pride, and insolence hurry thee;
                  there is a Master mightier than thou art. Yes, thou art a lord of slaves and vassals, but
                  do not forget thine own lord Paramount-namely, God!" There is a tradition of the
                  prophet Mohammed, on whom be blessing, announcing: On the day of resurrection, that will
                  be the most mortifying event when the good slave will be taken up to heaven, and the
                  wicked master sent down to hell.--- "Upon the bondsman, who is subservient to thy
                  command, wreak not thy rage and boundless displeasure. For it must be disgraceful on the
                day of reckoning to find the slave at liberty and the master in bondage."  
                
              Chapter VIII 
              Of The Duties Of Society 
              I 
              Riches are intended for the comfort of life, and not life for the purpose of hoarding
                  riches. I asked a wise man, saying: "Who is the fortunate man, and who is the
                  unfortunate?" He said: "That man was fortunate who spent and gave away, and that
                  man unfortunate who died and left behind.---Pray not for that good-for-nothing man who did
                nothing, for he passed his life in hoarding riches, and did not spend them."  
              II 
              The prophet Moses, on whom be peace, admonished Carum, saying: "Be bounteous in
                  like manner as God has been bounteous to thee": but he listened not, and you have
                  heard the end of him. Whoever did not an act of charity with his silver and gold
                  sacrificed his future prospects on his hoard of gold and silver. If desirous that thou
                  shouldst benefit by the wealth of this world, be generous with thy fellow creature, as God
                  has been generous with thee. The Arabs say: "Show thy generosity, but make it not
                    obligatory, That the benefit of it may redound to thee": that is, bestow and make
                  presents, but do not exact an obligation that the profit of that act may be returned to
                  you. Wherever the tree of generosity strikes root it sends forth its boughs, and they
                  shoot above the skies. If thou cherishes a hope of enjoying its fruit, by gratitude I
                  entreat of thee not to lay a saw upon its trunk. Render thanks to God, that thou wert
                  found worthy of his divine grace, that he has not excluded thee from the riches of his
                  bounty. Esteem it no obligation that thou art serving the king, but show thy gratitude to
                him, namely God, who has placed thee in this service.  
              III 
              Two persons labored to a vain, and studied to an unprofitable end: he who hoarded
                  wealth and did not spend it, and he who acquired knowledge and did not practice
                  it.---However much thou art read in theory, if thou hast no practice thou art ignorant. He
                  is neither a sage philosopher nor an acute divine, but a beast of burden with a load of
                  books. How can that brainless head know or comprehend whether he carries on his back a
                library or bundle of fagots?  
              IV 
              Learning is intended to fortify religious practice, and not to gratify worldly
                  traffic.---Whoever prostituted his temperance, piety, and science, gathered his harvest
                into a heap and set fire to it.  
              V 
              An intemperate man of learning is like a blind link-boy: He shows the road to
                  others, but sees it not himself: Whoever ventured his life on an unproductive hazard
                gained nothing by the risk, and lost his own stake.  
              VI 
              A kingdom is embellished by the wise, and religion rendered illustrious by the pious.
                  Kings stand more in need of the company of the intelligent than the intelligent do of the
                  society of kings.---If, O king! thou wilt listen to my advice, in all thy archives thou
                  canst not find a wiser maxim than this: entrust thy concerns only to the learned,
                notwithstanding business is not a learned man's concern.  
              VII 
              Three things have no durability without their concomitants: property without trade,
                knowledge without debate, or a sovereignty without government.  
              VIII 
              To compassionate the wicked is to tyrannize over the good; and to pardon the oppressor
                  is to deal harshly with the oppressed.---When thou patronizes and succors the base-born
                man, he looks to be made the partner of thy fortune.  
                          
                   
              IX 
              No reliance can be placed on the friendship of kings, nor vain hope put in the
                  melodious voice of boys; for that passes away like a vision, and this vanishes like a
                  dream.---Bestow not thy affections upon a mistress who has a thousand lovers; or, if thou
                bestows them upon her, be prepared for a separation.  
              X 
              Reveal not every secret you have to a friend, for how can you tell but that friend may
                  hereafter become an enemy? And bring not all the mischief you are able to do upon an
                  enemy, for he may one day become your friend. And any private affair that you wish to keep
                  secret, do not divulge to anybody; for, though such a person has your confidence, none can
                  be so true to your secret as yourself.---Silence is safer than to communicate the thought
                  of thy mind to anybody, and to warn him, saying: Do not divulge it, O silly man! confine
                  the water at the dam-head, for once it has a vent thou canst not stop it. Thou shouldst
                not utter a word in secret which thou wouldst not have spoken in the face of the public.  
              XI 
              A reduced foe, who offers his submission and courts your amity, can only have in view
                  to become a strong enemy, as they have said: "You can not trust the sincerity of
                  friends, then what are you to expect from the cajoling of foes?" Whoever despises a
                  weak enemy resembles him who neglects a spark of fire.---Today that thou canst quench it,
                  put it out; for let fire rise into a flame, and it may consume a whole world. Now that
                thou canst transfix him with thy arrow, permit not thy antagonist to string his bow.  
              XIII 
              Whoever is making a league with their enemies has it in his mind to do his friends an
                  ill turn.--- "O wise man! wash thy hands of that friend who is in confederacy with
                thy foes."  
              XIV 
              When irresolute in the dispatch of business, incline to that side which is the least
                  offensive.--Answer not with harshness a mild-spoken man, nor force him into war who knocks
                at the gate of peace.  
              XV 
              So long as money can answer, it were wrong in any business to put the life in
                  danger---as the Arabs say: "Let the sword decide after stratagem has failed":
                  When the hand is balked in every crafty endeavor, it is lawful to lay it upon the hilt of
                the saber.  
              XVI 
              Show no mercy to a subdued foe, for if he recover himself he will show you no
                  mercy.---When thou sees thy antagonist in a reduced state, curl not thy whiskers at him in
                contempt for in every bone there is marrow, and within every jacket there is a man.  
              XVII 
              Whoever puts a wicked man to death delivers mankind from his mischief, and the wretch
                  himself from God's vengeance.---Beneficence is praiseworthy; yet thou shouldst not
                  administer a balsam to the wound of the wicked. Knew he not who took compassion on a
                snake, that it is the pest of the sons of Adam.  
              XVIII 
              It is wrong to follow the advice of an adversary; nevertheless it is right to hear it,
                  that you may do the contrary; and this is the essence of good policy.---Sedulously shun
                  whatever your foe may recommend, otherwise thou may wring the hands of repentance on thy
                  knees. Should he show thee to the right a path straight as an arrow, turn aside from that,
                and take the path to the left.  
              XX 
              Two orders of mankind are the enemies of church and State: the king without clemency,
                  and the holy man without learning.---Let not that prince have rule over the State who is
                not himself obedient to the will of God.  
              XXI 
              It behooves a king so to regulate his anger toward his enemies as not to alarm the
                  confidence of his friends; for the fire of passion falls first on the angry man; afterward
                  its sparks will dart forth toward the foe, and him they may reach, or they may not. It ill
                  becomes the children of Adam, formed of dust, to harbor in their heads such pride,
                  arrogance, and passion. I can not fancy all this thy warmth and obstinacy to be created
                  from earth, but from fire. I went to a holy man in the land of Bailcan, and said:
                "Cleanse me of ignorance by thy instruction!" He replied: "O fakiq,
                  or theologician! go and bear things patiently like the earth; or whatever thou hast read
                let it all be buried under the earth."  
              XXII 
              An evil-disposed man is a captive in the hands of an enemy (namely, himself); for
                  wherever he may go he can not escape from the grasp of that enemy's vengeance.---Let a
                  wicked man ascend up to heaven, that he may escape from the grasp of calamity; even
                thither would the hand of his own evil heart follow him with misfortune.  
              XXIII 
              When you see discord raging among the troops of your enemy, be on your side quiet; but
                  if you see them united, think of your own dispersed state.---When thou beholdest war among
                  thy foes, go and enjoy peace with thy friends; but if thou find them of one soul and mind,
                string thy bow, and range stones around thy battlements.  
              XXVIII 
              Whoever is counseling a self-sufficient man stands himself in need of a counselor.  
              XXIX 
              Swallow not the wheedling of a rival, nor pay for the sycophancy of a parasite; for
                  that has laid the snare of treachery, and this whetted the palate of gluttony. The fool is
                  puffed up with his own praise, like a dead body, which on being stretched upon a bier
                  shows a momentary corpulency. ---Take heed and listen not to the sycophant's
                  blandishments, who expects in return some small compensation; for shouldst thou any day
                disappoint his object he would in like style sum up two hundred of thy defects.  
              XXX 
              'Till some person may show its defects, the speech of the orator will fail of
                  correctness.---Be not vain of the eloquence of thy discourse because it has the fool's
                good opinion, and thine own approbation.  
              XXXI 
              Every person thinks his own intellect perfect, and his own child handsome.---A Muslim
                  and a Jew were warm in argument to such a degree that I smiled at their subject. The
                  Muslim said in wrath: "If this deed of conveyance be not authentic may I, O God, die
                  a Jew!" The Jew replied: "On the Pentateuch I swear, if what I say be false, I
                  am a Muslim like you!" Were intellect to be annihilated from the face of the earth,
                nobody could be brought to say: "I am ignorant."  
              XXXII 
              Ten people will partake of the same joint of meat, and two dogs will snarl over a whole
                  carcass. The greedy man is incontinent with a whole world set before him; the temperate
                  man is content with his crust of bread.---A loaf of brown bread may fill an empty stomach,
                  but the produce of the whole globe can not satisfy a greedy eye.---My father, when the sun
                  of his life was going down, gave me this sage advice, and it set for good, saying:
                "Lust is a fire; refrain from indulging it, and do not involve thyself in the flames
                  of hell. Since thou hast not the strength of burning in those flames (as a punishment in
                  the next world), pour in this world the water of continence upon this fire---namely,
                lust."  
              XXXIII 
              Whoever does not do good, when he has the means of doing it, will suffer hardship when
                  he has not the means.---None is more unlucky than the misanthrope, for on the day of
                adversity he has not a single friend.  
                          
                   
              XXXIV 
              Life stands on the verge of a single breath; and this world is an existence between two
                  nonentities. Such as truck their deen, or religious practice, for worldly pelf are
                  asses. They sold Joseph, and what got they by their bargain?---"Did I not covenant
                  with you, O ye sons of Adam, that you should not serve Satan; for verily he is your avowed
                  enemy."---By the advice of a foe you broke your faith with a friend; behold from whom
                you separated, and with whom you united yourselves.  
              XXXVI 
              Whatever is produced in haste goes hastily to waste.---I have heard that, after a
                  process of forty years, they convert the clay of the East into a China porcelain cup. At
                  Baghdad they can make a hundred cups in a day, and thou may of course conceive their
                  respective value. A chicken walks forth from its shell, and goes in quest of its food; the
                  young of man possesses not that instinct of prudence and discrimination. That which was at
                  once something comes to nothing; and this surpasses all creatures in dignity and wisdom. A
                  piece of crystal or glass is found everywhere, and held of no value; a ruby is obtained
                with difficulty, and therefore inestimable.  
              XXXVII 
              Patience accomplishes its object, while hurry speeds to its ruin.---With my own eyes I
                  saw in the desert that the deliberate man outstripped him that had hurried on. The
                  wing-footed steed is broken down in his speed, whilst the camel-driver jogs on with his
                beast to the end of his journey.  
              XXXVIII 
              Nothing is so good for an ignorant man as silence, and if he knew this he would no
                  longer be ignorant.---When unadorned with the grace of eloquence it is wise to keep watch
                  over the tongue in the mouth. The tongue, by abuse, renders a man contemptible; levity in
                  a nut is a sign of its being empty. A fool was undertaking the instruction of an ass, and
                  had devoted his whole time to this occupation. A wise man said to him: "What art thou
                  endeavoring to do? In this vain attempt dread the reproof of the censorious! A brute can
                  never learn speech from thee; do thou learn silence from him." That man who reflects
                  not before he speaks will only make all the more improper answer. Either like a man
                arrange thy speech with judgment, or like a brute sit silent. 
              XXXIX 
              Whoever shall argue with one more learned than himself that others may take him for a
                  wise man, only confirms them in his being a fool.---"When a person superior to what
                  thou art engages thee in conversation do not contradict him, though thou may know
                better."  
              XL 
              He can see no good who will associate with the wicked.---Were an angel from heaven to
                  associate with a demon, he would learn his brutality, perfidy, and hypocrisy. Virtue thou
                  never canst learn of the vicious; it is not the wolf's occupation to mend skins, but to
                tear them.  
              XLI 
              Expose not the secret failings of mankind, otherwise you must verily bring scandal upon
                them and distrust upon yourself.  
              XLII 
              Whoever acquires knowledge and does not practice it resembles him who plows his land
                and leaves it unsown.  
              XLVI 
              It is not every man that has a handsome physical exterior that has a good moral
                  character; for the faculty of business or virtue resides in the heart and not in the skin.
                  Thou canst in one day ascertain the intellectual faculties of a man, and what proficiency
                  he has made in his degrees of knowledge; but be not secure of his mind, nor foolishly
                sure, for it may take years to detect the innate baseness of the heart.  
              XLVII 
              Whoever contends with the great sheds his own blood.---Thou contemplates yourself as a
                  mighty great man; and they have truly remarked that the squinter sees double. Thou, who
                canst in play butt with a ram, must soon find thyself with a broken pate.  
                          
                   
              XLVIII 
              To grapple with a lion, or to box against a naked scimitar, are not the acts of the
                  prudent.---Brave not the furious with war and opposition; before their arms of strength
                cross thy hands of submission.  
              XLIX 
              A weak man, who tries his courage against the strong, leagues with the foe to his own
                  destruction.--Nurtured in a shade, what strength can he have that he should engage with
                  the warlike in battle; impotent of arm, he was falling the victim of folly when he set his
                wrist in opposition to a wrist of iron.  
              L 
              Whoever will not listen to admonition harbors the fancy of hearing reprehension.---When
                advice gains not an admission into the ear, if I give thee reproof, hear it in silence.  
              LI  
              The idle can not endure the industrious any more than the curs of the market-place,
                who, on meeting dogs employed for sporting, will snarl at and prevent them passing.  
              LII 
              A mean wretch, that can not vie with another in virtue, will assail him with
                  malignity.---The narrow-minded envier will somehow manage to revile thee, who in thy
                presence might have the tongue of his utterance struck dumb.  
              LV 
              To hold counsel with women is bad, and to deal generously with prodigals a
                  fault.---Showing mercy upon the sharp-fanged pard must prove an injustice to the harmless
                sheep.  
              LVI 
              Whoever has his foe at his mercy, and does not kill him, is his own enemy.---With a
                  stone in his hand, and the snake's head convenient, a wise man hesitates not in crushing
                  it. Certain people have seen this maxim in an opposite point of view, saying: "It
                  were wiser to delay the execution of captives, inasmuch as the option is left so that you
                  can slay, or you can release them; but if you shall have heedlessly put them to death, the
                  policy is defunct, for the opportunity of repairing is lost."--There is no great
                  difficulty to separate the soul from the body, but it is not so easy to restore life to
                  the dead: prudence dictates patience in giving the arrow flight, for let it quit the bow
                and it never can be recalled.  
              LVII 
              A learned man who has got into an argument with the ignorant can have no hopes of
                  supporting his own dignity; and if an ignoramus by his loquacity gets the upper hand it
                  should not surprise us, for he is a stone and can bruise a gem. No wonder if his spirit
                  flag; the nightingale is cooped up in the same cage with the crow.---If the man of sense
                  is coarsely treated by the vulgar, let it not excite our wrath and indignation; if a piece
                  of worthless stone can bruise a cup of gold, its worth is not increased, nor that of the
                gold diminished.  
              LX 
              Genius without education is the subject of our regret, and education without genius is
                  labor lost. Although embers have a lofty origin (fire being of a noble nature), yet, as
                  having no intrinsic worth, they fall upon a level with common dust; on the other hand,
                  sugar does not derive its value from the cane, but from its own innate quality.---Inasmuch
                  as the disposition of Canaan was bad, his descent from the prophet Noah stood him in no
                  stead. Pride thyself on what virtue thou hast, and not on thy parentage; the rose springs
                from a thorn-bush, and Abraham from Azor (either his father's name, or fire).  
              LXI 
              That is musk which discloses itself by its smell, and not what the perfumers impose
                  upon us.---If a man be expert in any art he needs not tell it, for his own skill will show
                it.  
              LXII 
              A wise man is like a vase in a druggist's shop, silent, but full of virtues; and the
                  ignorant man resembles the drum of the warrior, being full of noise, and an empty
                  babbler.---The sincerely devout have remarked that a learned man, beset by the illiterate,
                  is like one of the lovely in a circle of the blind, or the holy Qur'an in the dwelling of
                the infidel.  
              LXIII 
              A friend whom they take an age to conciliate, it were wrong all at once to
                  alienate.---In a series of years a stone changes into a ruby; take heed, and destroy it
                not at once by dashing it against another stone.  
              LXIV 
              Reason is in like manner enthralled by passion, as an uxorious man is in the hands of
                  an artful woman. Thou may shut the door of joy upon that dwelling where thou hearest
                resounding the scolding voice of a woman.  
              LXV 
              Intellect, without firmness, is craft and chicanery; and firmness, without intellect,
                  perverseness and obstinacy.---First, prudence, good sense, and discrimination, and then
                  dominion; for the dominion and good fortune of the ignorant are the armor of rebellion
                against God.  
              LXVI 
              The sinner who spends and gives away is better than the devotee who begs and lays by.  
              LXVII 
              Whoever foregoes carnal indulgence in order to get the good opinion of mankind, has
                  forsaken a lawful passion and involved himself in what is forbidden.---What, wretched
                  creature! can that hermit see in his own tarnished mirror, or heart, who retires to a
                cell, but not for the sake of God?  
              LXIX 
              A wise man should not through clemency overlook the insolence of the vulgar, otherwise
                  both sustain a loss, for their respect for him is lessened and their own brutality
                  confirmed: ---When thou addresses the low with urbanity and kindness, it only adds to
                their pride and arrogance.  
              LXXIV 
              In a season of drought and scarcity ask not the distressed dervish, saying: "How
                  are you?" Unless on the condition that you apply a balm to his wound, and supply him
                  with the means of subsistence.--The ass which thou sees stuck in the slough with his
                  rider, compassionate from thy heart, otherwise do not go near him. Now that thou went and
                  asked him how he fell, like a sturdy fellow bind up thy loins, and take his ass by the
                tail.  
              LXXV 
              Two things are repugnant to reason: to expend more than what Providence has allotted
                  for us, and to die before our ordained time.---Whether offered up in gratitude, or uttered
                  in complaint, destiny can not be altered by a thousand sighs and lamentations. The angel
                  who presides over the storehouse of the winds feels no compunction, though he extinguish
                the old woman's lamp.  
              LXXVI 
              O you that are going in quest of food, sit down, that you may have to eat. And, O you
                  that death is in quest of, go not on, for you can not carry life along with you.---In
                  search of thy daily bread, whether thou exert thyself, or whether thou dost not, the God
                  of Majesty and Glory will equally provide it. Wert thou to walk into the mouth of a tiger
                or lion, he could not devour thee, unless by the ordinance of thy destiny.  
              LXXVII 
              Whatever was not designed, the hand can not reach; and whatever was ordained, it can
                  attain in any situation. ---Thou hast heard that Alexander got as far as chaos; but after
                all this toil he drank not the water of immortality.  
              LXXVIII 
              The fisherman, unless it be his lot, catches no fish in the Tigris; and the fish,
                  unless it be its fate, does not die on the dry land.---The wretched miser is prowling all
                over the world, he in quest of pelf, and death in quest of him.  
              LXXXI 
              The envious man is niggard of the gifts of Providence, and an enemy of the
                  innocent.---I met a dry-brained fellow of this sort, tricked forth in the robe of a
                  dignified person. I said: "O sir! if thou art unfortunate in having this disposition,
                  in what have the fortunate been to blame?---Take heed, and wish not misfortune to the
                  misanthrope, for his own ill-conditioned lot is calamity sufficient. What need is there of
                showing ill-will to him, who has such an enemy close at his heels?"  
                          
                   
              LXXXII 
              A scholar without diligence is a lover without money; a traveler without knowledge is a
                  bird without wings; a theorist without practice is a tree without fruit; and a devotee
                without learning is a house without an entrance.  
              LXXXIII 
              The object of sending the Qur'an down from heaven was that mankind might make it a
                manual of morals, and not that they should recite it by sections.  
                          
                   
              LXXXIV 
              The sincere publican has proceeded on foot; the slothful Pharisee is mounted and gone
                asleep.  
              LXXXV 
              The sinner who humbles himself in prayer is more acceptable than the devotee who is
                  puffed up with pride.---The courteous and kind-hearted soldier of fortune is better than
                the misanthropic and learned divine.  
              LXXXVI 
              A learned man without works is a bee without honey. ---Tell that harsh and ungenerous
                hornet: As thou yield no honey, wound not with thy sting.  
              LXXXIX 
              Though a dress presented by the sovereign be honorable, yet is our own tattered garment
                  preferable; and though the viands at a great man's table be delicate, yet is our own
                  homely fare more sweet. ---A salad and vinegar, the produce of our own industry, are
                sweeter than the lamb and bread sauce at the table of our village chief.  
              XC 
              It is contrary to sound judgment, and repugnant to the maxims of the prudent, to take a
                medicine on conjecture, or to follow a road but in the track of a caravan.  
              XCI 
              They asked Imaan Mursheed Mohammed-bin-Mohammed Ghazali, on whom be God's mercy, how he
                  had reached such a pitch of knowledge. He replied: "Whatever I was ignorant of
                  myself, I felt no shame in asking of others."---Thy prospect of health conforms with
                  reason, when thy pulse is in charge of a skilled physician. Ask whatever thou know not;
                for the condescension of inquiring is a guide on thy road in the excellence of learning.  
              XCII 
              Anything you foresee that you may somehow come to know, be not hasty in questioning,
                  lest your consequence and respectability may suffer.---When Lokman perceived that in the
                  hands of David iron was miraculously molded like was, he asked him not, How didst thou do
                it? for he was aware that he should know it, through his own wisdom, without asking.  
              XCIII 
              It is one of the laws of good breeding that you should forego an engagement or
                  accommodate yourself to the master of the entertainment.---If thou know that the
                  inclination is reciprocal, accommodate thy story to the temper of the hearer Any discreet
                man that was in Mujnun's company would entertain him only with encomiums on Laila.  
              XCVIII 
              To tell a falsehood is like the cut of a saber; for though the wound may heal, the scar
                  of it will remain. In like manner as the brothers of the blessed Joseph, who, being
                  notorious for a lie, had no credit afterward when they spoke the truth: God on high has
                  said---Jacob is supposed to speak--(Qur'an xii. Sale ii. 35): "Nay, but rather ye
                  have contrived this to gratify your own passion; yet it behooves me to be
                  patient."---If a man who is in the habit of speaking truth lets a mistake escape him,
                  we can overlook it; but if he be notorious for uttering falsehoods, and tell a truth, thou
                wilt call it a lie.  
              XCIX 
              The noblest of creatures is man, and the vilest of animals is no doubt a dog; yet, in
                  the concurring opinion of the wise, a dog, thankful for his food, is more worthy than a
                  human being who is void of gratitude.---A dog will never forget the crumb thou gavest him,
                  though thou may afterward throw a hundred stones at his head; but foster with thy kindness
                a low man for an age, and on the smallest provocation he will be up against thee in arms.  
                          
                   
              CI 
              It is written in the Injeel, or Gospel, stating: "O son of man, if I bestow riches
                  upon you you will be more intent upon your property than upon me, and if I leave you in
                  poverty you will sit down dejected; how then can you feel a relish to praise, or a zeal to
                  worship me?" (Proverbs xxx. 7, 8, 9).-----In the day of plenty thou art proud and
                  negligent; in the time of want, full of sorrow and dejected; since in prosperity and
                  adversity such is thy condition, it were difficult to state when thou wouldst voluntarily
                do thy duty.  
              CII 
              The pleasure of Him, or God, who has no equal, hurls one man from a throne of
                  sovereignty, and another he preserves in a fish's belly.---Happy proceeds his time who is
                  enraptured with thy praise, though, like Jonah, he even may pass it in the belly of a
                fish!  
              CIII 
              Were the Almighty to unsheathe the sword of his wrath, prophets and patriarchs would
                  draw in their heads; and were he to deign a glimpse of his benevolence, it would reach the
                  wicked along with the good.---Were he on the day of judgment to call us to a strict
                  account, even the prophets would have no room for excuse. Say, withdraw the veil from the
                face of thy compassion, that sinners may entertain hopes of pardon.  
              CIV 
              Whoever is not to be brought into the path of righteousness by the punishments of this
                  life shall be overtaken with the punishments of that to come: "Verily, I will cause
                  them to taste the lesser punishment over and above the greater punishment" (Qur'an
                  xxxii. Sale ii. 258).---Princes, in chastising, admonish, and then confine; when they
                admonish, and thou listen not, they throw thee into prison.  
              CV 
              Men of auspicious fortune would rather take warning from the precepts and examples of
                  their predecessors than that the rising generation should take warning from their
                  acts.---The bird will not approach the grain that is spread about, where it sees another
                  bird a captive in the snare. Take warning by the mischance of others, that others may not
                take warning by thine.  
              CVI 
              How can he help himself who was born deaf, if he can not hear; and what can he do whose
                  thread of fortune is dragging him on that he may not proceed?---The dark night of such as
                  are beloved of God is serene and light as the bright day; but this good fortune results
                  not from thine own strength of arm, 'till God in his mercy deign to bestow it. To whom
                  shall I complain of thee? for there is no judge else, nor is any arm mightier than thine.
                  Him whom thou directs none can lead astray, and him whom thou bewilders none can direct
                upon his way.  
              CVII 
              The beggar whose end is good is better off than the king whose end is evil.---That
                sorrow which is the harbinger of joy is preferable to the joy which is followed by sorrow.  
              CVIII 
              The sky enriches the earth with rain, and the earth gives it dust in return. As the
                  Arabs say: "What the vessels have, that they give."---If my moral character
                strike thee as improper, do not renounce thine own good character.  
              CIX 
              The Most High God discerns and hides what is improper; my neighbor sees not, and is
                  loud in his clamor.---God preserve us! if man knew what is hidden, none could be safe from
                the animadversion of his neighbor.  
              CX 
              Gold is got from the mine by digging into the earth; and from the grasp of the miser by
                  taking away his life.---Misers spend not, but watch with solicitude: expectation, they
                  say, is preferable to waste. Next day observe to the joy of their enemies, the gold
                remains, and they are dead without the enjoyment of that hope.  
                          
                   
              CXI 
              Such as deal hard with the weak will suffer from the exertion of the strong.---It is
                  not every arm in which there is strength that can wrench the hand of a weak man. Bring not
                affliction upon the hearts of the feeble, lest thou may fall under the lash of the strong. 
              CXII  
              A wise man, where he meets opposition, labors to get through it, and where he finds
                  quiet he drops his anchor, for there safety is on one side, and here enjoyment in the
                middle of it.  
              CXIII 
              The gamester wants three sixes, but he throws only three aces.---The pasture meadow is
                a thousand times richer than the common, but the horse has not his tether at command.  
              CXIV 
              The dervish in his prayer is saying: "O God, have compassion on the wicked, for to
                the good thou hast been abundantly kind, inasmuch as thou hast made them virtuous."  
              CXV 
              Jemshid was the first person who put an edging round his garment, and a ring upon his
                  finger. They asked him: "Why did you bestow all the decoration and ornament on the
                  left hand, whilst the right is the superior?" He answered: "Sufficient for the
                  right is the ornament of being right." Feridun commanded the gilders of China that
                  they would inscribe upon the front of his palace: "Strive, O wise man, to make the
                wicked good, for the good are of themselves great and fortunate." 
              CXVI 
              They said to a great and holy man: "Notwithstanding the superiority that the right
                  hand commands, why do they wear the ring on the left hand?" He replied: "Are you
                  not aware that the best are most neglected! "He who casts our horoscope, provision,
                and fortune, bestows upon us either good luck or wisdom."  
              CXVII 
              It is proper for him to offer counsel to kings who dreads not to lose his head, nor
                  looks for a reward.---Whether thou strew heaps of gold at his feet, or brandishes an
                  Indian sword over the Unitarian's head, to hope or fear he is alike indifferent; and in
                this the divine unity alone he is resolved and firm.  
              CXVIII 
              It belongs to the king to displace extortioners, to the superintendent of the police to
                  guard against murderers, and to the cazi to decide in quarrels and disputes. No two
                  complainants ever referred to the cazi content to abide by justice. When thou know that in
                  right the claim is just, better pay with a grace than by distress and force. If a man is
                  refractory in discharging his revenue, the collector must necessarily coerce him to pay
                it.  
              CXIX 
              Every man's teeth are blunted by acids excepting the cazi's, and they require
                  sweets.---That cazi, or judge, that can accept of five cucumbers as a bribe will confirm
                thee in a right to ten fields of melons.  
              CXXI 
              They asked a wise man, saying: "Of the many celebrated trees which the Most High
                  God has created lofty and umbrageous, they call none azad, or free, excepting the
                  cypress, which bears no fruit; what mystery is there in this ?" He replied:
                "Each has its appropriate produce and appointed season, during the continuance of
                  which it is fresh and blooming, and during their absence dry and withered; to neither of
                  which states is the cypress exposed, being always flourishing; and of this nature are the
                  a:zads, or religious independents. Fix not thy heart on what is transitory; for the
                  Dijlah, or Tigris, will continue to flow through Baghdad after the race of Caliphs is
                  extinct. If thy hand has plenty, be liberal as the date-tree; but if it affords nothing to
                give away, be an azad, or free man, like the cypress.  
              CXXII 
              Two orders of mankind died, and carried with them regret: such as had and did not
                  spend, and such as knew and did not practice. ---None can see that wretched mortal a miser
                  who will not endeavor to point out his faults; but were the generous man to have a hundred
                defects, his liberality would cover all his blemishes.  
                
              Colophon 
              The book of the "Gulistan, or Flower-Garden," was completed through the
                  assistance and grace of God. Throughout the whole of this work I have not followed the
                  custom of writers by inserting verses of poetry borrowed from former authors: "It is
                  more decorous to wear our own patched and old cloak than to ask in loan another man's
                  garment." Most of these sayings have a dash of hilarity and an odor of gaiety about
                  them, in consequence of which short-sighted critics extend the tongue of animadversion,
                  saying: "It is not the occupation of sensible men to solicit marrow from a shriveled
                  brain, or to digest the smoke of a profitless lamp." Nevertheless it can not be
                  concealed from the enlightened judgment of the holy and good, to whom these discourses are
                  specially addressed, that the pearls of salutary admonition are threaded on the cord of an
                  elegance of language, and the bitter potion of instruction sweetened with the honey of
                  facetiousness, that the taste of the reader may not take disgust, and himself be debarred
                  from the pleasure of approving of them: "On our part we offered some good advice, and
                  spent an age in bringing it to perfection. If that should not meet the ear of anybody's
                good-will, prophets deliver their messages, or warn mankind; and that is enough."  
              O thou who peruses this book, ask the mercy of God on the author of it: his forgiveness
                  on the transcriber. Petition for whatever charitable gift thou may require for thyself,
                  and implore pardon on the owner. The book is finished through the favor of the Lord God
                Paramount and the bestower of all good!  
             
              Source. 
              From: Charles F. Horne, ed., The Sacred Books and Early Literature of the East,
              (New York: Parke, Austin, & Lipscomb, 1917), Vol. VIII: Medieval Persia, pp.
              227-328.  
              This was a reprint of  
              
                Saadi. Gulistan; or, Flower-garden,  trans., with an essay, by James
                  Ross: and a note upon the translator by Charles Sayle. (London: W. Scott, 1890). 
               
              And was probably also in 
              
                Persian literature ... / with a special introduction by Richard  J.H.
                  Gottheil ... Rev. ed. (London: The Colonial press, 1900) 
                  [On cover of Vol. 1: Persian and Japanese literature. Vol. 2 has imprint: New York, P.F.
                  Collier. Vol. 2 issued with Japanese literature. [New York, c1900] Vol. 2 has series: The
                  world's greatest literature. Contents: v.1. The Shah Nameh, by Firdusi (Abul Kasim Mansur)
                  tr. into English by J. Atkinson. The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam; translation by E.
                  FitzGerald. The Divan, by Hafiz; translation by H. Bicknell--v.2. The Gulistan, by Sa'di ;
                  translation by J Ross.] 
               
              Is it possible Ross's version was an improvment on Francis Gladwin's, since Ross was
              also responsible for: 
              
                Saadi, The Gulistan, or Rose garden. By Musle-Huddeen Sheik Saadi, of Shiraz.
                  Tr. from the original by Francis Gladwin. With an essay on Saadi's life and genius, by
                  James Ross, and a preface by R. W. Emerson. (Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1865) 
               
              Scanned by Jerome S. Arkenberg, Cal. State Fullerton. The text has been modernized by
              Prof. Arkenberg. 
             
              This text is part of the Internet
              Medieval Source Book. The Sourcebook is a collection of public domain and
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              © Paul Halsall, September 1998  
          halsall@murray.fordham.edu               
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