JAVID NAMA [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Muhammad Iqbal

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DEPARTURE FOR THE GARDEN
OF PARADISE

































































































































































































I passed beyond the
bounds of this universe
and set foot in the
undimensioned world,
a world without both
right and left,
2755
a world devoid of night
and day.
Before it the lantern
of my perception dimmed,
my words died in awe of
the meaning.
To speak of the spirit
with the tongue of water and clay—
it is very hard to soar
in a cage!
2760
Regard a little while
the world of the heart
that you may win clear
vision by the light of the Self.
What is the heart? A
world without colour and scent,
a world without colour
and scent and without dimensions.
The heart is at rest,
yet every moment in motion;
2765
the heart is a world of
spiritual states and thoughts.
Reason makes its way
from fact to fact,
it travels without
highroad and tramping and transport;
a hundred images, each
different from the other,
this one acquaint with
heaven, that one unattaining.
2770
No one says that this
which is acquaint with heaven
is on the right hand of
that unattaining image,
or that the joy which
comes from beholding the beloved
is but half a pace from
the air of His street.
Your eyes may be
wakeful or asleep;
2775
the heart sees without
the rays of the sun.
Know that world by the
world of the heart—
yet what shall I say of
what defies analogy?
In that universe was
another world
whose origin was from
another Divine fiat,
2780
undecaying, and every
moment transformed,
unimaginable, yet there
clearly visible;
every moment clothed in
a new perfection,
every moment clad in a
new beauty.
Its time had no need of
moon and sun;
2785
in its expanse the nine
spheres are contained.
Whatever is in the
Unseen comes face to face
even before the desire
for it issues from the heart.
How can I tell in my
own tongue what it is,
this world? It is
light, and presence, and life.
2790
Tulips repose amidst
the mountains,
rivers meander in the
rose -gardens;
buds crimson, white and
blue
blossom with the breath
of the holy ones;
its waters silver, the
air ambergris,
2795
palaces with domes of
emerald,
tents of ruby with
golden ropes,
beauties with
countenances radiant as a mirror.
Rumi said,
‘Prisoner of analogy,
pass beyond the
credibility of the senses,
2800
acts fair and foul
derive out of manifestation,
the latter turning to
Hell, the former to Heaven;
these many-coloured
palaces you behold
are built of deeds, not
of bricks and stones;
what you call Kauthar
and page and houri
2805
are the reflection of
this world of ecstasy and joy.
Here life is the
Beatific Vision, naught else,
the bliss of seeing and
speaking with the Beloved.’

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