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Passages similar to: The Masnavi — The Jewish King, his Vazir, and the Christians
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Sufi
The Masnavi
The Jewish King, his Vazir, and the Christians (21-30)
And we are even as greedy and foolish birds; Every moment our feet are caught in a fresh snare ; Yea, each one of us, though he be a falcon or Simurgh! Thou dost release us every moment, and straightway We again fly into the snare, O Almighty One! Sleep of the body the soul's awakening. Every night Thou freest our spirits from the body And its snare, making them pure as rased tablets. Every night spirits are released from this cage, And set free, neither lording it nor lorded over.
Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Fourteenth Bird Speaks (4)
A Sufi woke one night and said to himself: 'It seems to me that the world is like a chest in which we are put and the lid shut down, and we give...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
Discussion Between the Hoopoe and the Birds (2)
The Hoopoe said: 'O birds without aspiration! How shall love spring bountifully in a heart devoid of sensibility? Begging the question like this,...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Parrot (1)
Then came the Parrot with sugar in her beak, dressed in a garment of green, and round her neck a collar of gold. The hawk is but a gnat beside her...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
Discussion Between the Hoopoe and the Birds (1)
Then all the birds, one after another, began to make foolish excuses. If I do not repeat them, pardon me, reader, for it would take too long. But how...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Peacock (1)
Next came the golden Peacock, with feathers of a hundred - what shall I say? - a hundred thousand colours! He displayed himself, turning this way and...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Query of the Fourth Bird (1)
Another bird said to the Hoopoe: ' I am effeminate, and can only hop from one branch to another. Sometimes I am wanton and dissolute, at other times...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
Attitude of the Birds (1)
When the birds had listened to this discourse of the Hoopoe their heads drooped down, and sorrow pierced their hearts. Now they understood how...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Seventeenth Bird Questions the Hoopoe (1)
Another bird said to the Hoopoe: 'As long as I live the love of the Eternal Being will be dear and agreeable to me, and I shall never cease to think...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
Excuses of the Fifth Bird (2)
One evening, Abbasah said: 'Supposing that the unbelievers who fill the earth, and even the loquacious Turkomans, should sincerely accept the Faith -...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Owl (1)
The Owl came forward with a bewildered air and said: 'I have chosen for my dwelling a ruined and tumbledown house. I was born among the ruins and...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Partridge (1)
The Partridge next approached, graceful yet self-satisfied. Shyly she rises from her treasure of pearls in her garment of the dawn. With blood-rimmed...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
Excuses of the Eighth Bird (2)
Have you ever watched the spider and noted how fantastically she spends her time? With speed and foresight she spins her marvellous web, a house...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Nightingale (1)
The amorous Nightingale first came forward almost beside himself with passion. He poured emotion into each of the thousand notes of his song; and in...
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