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Passages similar to: The Conference of the Birds — Question of the Sixteenth Bird
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
Question of the Sixteenth Bird (2)
Khorassan was in a state of prosperity because of the wise rule of Prince Amid. He was attended by a hundred Turkish slaves whose countenances shone like the full moon, their bodies were slender cypresses, their legs as silver, and their breath was musk. They wore ear-rings of pearl whose reflection lighted up the night and made it seem as day; their turbans were of the finest brocade, and round their necks were collars of gold; their breasts were covered with silver cloth, and their belts enriched with precious stones. All were mounted on white horses. Whoever looked at one of them lost his heart at once. By chance, a Sufi, clothed in rags and baiefoot, saw this body of young men in the distance, and asked: 'What is this cavalcade of houris?' He was told, 'These young men are the pages of Amid, the prince of this city.' WTen the idiot of God heard this, the vapour of folly went to his head and he cried: 'O God, the possessor of the glorious canopy, teach Amid to take care of his servants.' If you are like this idiot, have also his boldness; lift yourself up like a slender tree; but if you have no leaves do not be daring and do not jest. The daring of the fools of God is a good thing. They cannot tell if the way is good or bad, they only know how to act.
Sufi
Mahmud and Ayaz. 1 (Summary)
Mahmud, the celebrated king of Ghazni, had a favorite named Ayaz, who was greatly envied by the other courtiers. One day they came to the king and...
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Greek
Book VIII (560)
It must be so. And there are times when the democratical principle gives way to the oligarchical, and some of his desires die, and others are banished...
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Sufi
The Deadly Mosque (Summary)
In the suburbs of a certain city there was a mosque in which none could sleep a night and live. Some said it was haunted by malevolent fairies;...
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Sufi
The Arab Carrier and the Scholar (Summary)
An Arab loaded his camel with two sacks, filling one with wheat and the second with sand, in order to balance the first. As he was proceeding on his...
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Sufi
The Arab and his Wife (Summary)
An Arab lived with his wife in the desert in extreme poverty, so that they became a reproach to their neighbours. The wife at last lost patience, and...
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Sufi
The Knowledge of This World (5)
Thus the occupations and businesses of the world have become more and more complicated and troublesome, chiefly owing to the fact that men have...
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Sufi
The Faqir and the Hidden Treasure (Summary)
Notwithstanding the clear evidence of God's bounty, engendering these spiritual states in men, philosophers and learned men, wise in their own...
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Sufi
The Man who received a Pension from the Prefect of Tabriz (Summary)
These reflections on the nothingness of outward form compared to spirit lead the poet to the corollary that often men whose outward forms are buried...
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Sufi
The Boys and their Teacher (Summary)
To illustrate the force of imagination or opinion, a story is told of a trick played by boys upon their master. The boys wished to obtain a holiday,...
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Sufi
The Arab and his Wife (171-180)
Beginning and end, and also has no beginning or end. But God forbid! This story is not a vain fable, 'Tis the ready money of your state and mine, be...
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Sufi
The King and his Three Sons (Summary)
A certain king had three sons, who were the light of his eyes, and, as it were, a fountain whence the palm tree of his heart drank the water of...
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Sufi
The Sufi's Beast (Summary)
After anecdotes of the man, in the time of 'Omar, who mistook his eyelash for the new moon, of one who stole a snake and got bitten by it, and of...
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Sufi
The Darvesh who Broke his Vow (23-33)
Their eyes and ears are open and the snare is in front, Yet they fly into the snare with their own wings! Comparison of the divine decrees to...
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Hermetic
Section XXIV (2)
Further, in that ’tis fitting that the prudent should know all before, it is not right ye should be ignorant of this. The time will come when Egypt...
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Western Esoteric
Inferno: Canto XVI (1)
Now was I where was heard the reverberation Of water falling into the next round, Like to that humming which the beehives make, When shadows three...
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Sufi
The Sufi's Beast (1-10)
What is it hinders me from expounding my doctrines But this, that my hearers' hearts incline elsewhere. Their thoughts are intent on that Sufi guest;...
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Neoplatonic
CHAP. XXXII. (7)
It is likewise said, that these men expelled lamentations and tears, and every thing else of this kind. They also abstained from entreaty, from...
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Mesopotamian
Tablet VII (9)
Seizing me, he led me down to the House of Darkness, the dwelling of Irkalla, to the house where those who enter do not come out, along the road of...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter CLXXXIII (8)
Egypt and the desert are at peace; they are the vassals of thy royal diadem; the temples and the cities are well ordered in their places; the cities...
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Western Esoteric
Purgatorio: Canto XV (6)
My Leader, who could see me bear myself Like to a man that rouses him from sleep, Exclaimed: "What ails thee, that thou canst not stand? But hast...
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