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Passages similar to: The Masnavi — The Lover who read Sonnets to his Mistress
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Sufi
The Masnavi
The Lover who read Sonnets to his Mistress (1-11)
Whoso is restricted to religious raptures is but a man; Sometimes his rapture is excessive, sometimes deficient. The Sufi is, as it were, the "son of the season," Religious raptures depend on feelings and will, You are a lover of your own raptures, not of me; Whoso is now defective, now perfect, Is not adored by Abraham; he is "one that sets." Because the stars set, and are now up, now down, He loved them not; "I love not them that set." Whoso is now pleasing and now unpleasing Is at one time water, at another fire.
Sufi
Concerning Music and Dancing as Aids to the Religious Life (11-12)
By this the writer means that the true delights of religion cannot be reached by way of formal instruction, but by felt attraction and desire. A man...
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Sufi
Concerning Music and Dancing as Aids to the Religious Life (8)
As regards the erotic poetry which is recited in Sufi gatherings, and to which people sometimes make objection, we must remember that, when in such...
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Sufi
Concerning Music and Dancing as Aids to the Religious Life (14)
The states of ecstasy into which the Sufis fall vary according to the emotions which predominate in them -- love, fear, desire, repentance, etc....
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
Speech of the Second Bird (3)
Rabi'ah, although a woman, was the crown of men. She once spent eight years making a pilgrimage to the Ka'aba by measuring her length on the ground....
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