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Passages similar to: The Masnavi — The Boys and their Teacher
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Sufi
The Masnavi
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, and the sharpest of them suggested that when the master came into the school each boy should condole with him on his alleged sickly appearance. Accordingly, when he entered, one said, "O master, how pale you are looking!" and another said, "You are looking very ill today," and so on. The master at first answered that there was nothing the matter with him, but as one boy after another continued assuring him that he looked very ill, he was at length deluded into imagining that he must really be ill. So he returned to his house, making the boys follow him there, and told his wife that he was not well, bidding her mark how pale he was. His wife assured him he was not looking pale, and offered to convince him by bringing a mirror; but he refused to look at it, and took to his bed. He then ordered the boys to begin their lessons; but they assured him that the noise made his head ache, and he believed them, and dismissed them to their homes, to the annoyance of their mothers. Apropos of the sharpness of the boy who devised this trick, the poet takes occasion to controvert the opinion of the Mu'tazalites, that all m en are born with equal ability, and to express his agreement with the doctrine of the Sunnis, that the innate capacities of men vary very greatly.
Sufi
The Knowledge of God (11)
We have a common instance of this referring to second causes what ought to be referred to the First Cause in the case of so-called illness. For...
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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...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Third Valley or The Valley of Understanding (5)
One day, in the desert, Mahmud saw a faquir whose head was bowed in sadness and whose back was bent with sorrow. When the sultan went up to him the...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
Request of the Thirteenth Bird (2)
One day Shaikh Khircani, who rested upon the very throne of God, had an intense longing for an aubergine. He called for it with horn and voice, so...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
Question of the Twelfth Bird (2)
A learned doctor, a pivot of the world and blessed with excellent qualities, recounted the following: 'One night,' he said, 'I saw in a dream Bayazid...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
Speech of the Eighteenth Bird (2)
The shaikh went out one day from his monastery in the company of his disciples, riding on his donkey while his companions followed walking. All at...
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