O GIVE me, friends, your care, |
Lest in my madness loudly I proclaim |
The secrets of the Lord, that all may know. |
Like wax I melt within Love’s eager flame, |
But in my breast a heart of stone I bear, |
Mocking its glow. |
Down unto death I went, |
The Heavens upon me showered their cruel blows. |
Pity me, O ye Chosen Ones of God! |
O Enemy, when shall I gain repose, |
How long shall I groan under chastisement, |
Wince ’neath the rod? |
How darkened is my fame! |
Extravagantly have I spent my store, |
And empty-handed in the market stand; |
A dervish am I, and can give no more, |
No emperor, with glory round my name |
And lavish hand. |
Foundered my boat of life; |
Vainly upon the ocean of despair |
I ventured out, seeking the tranquil shore |
And the Beloved. No farther can I dare— |
I bow to Fate, I turn me from the strife, |
I scheme no more. |
The time of spring is past, |
The rose-leaves in the garden drift apart, |
Among the trees the bulbul sings no more. |
How long, O madness, shalt thou hold my heart? |
How long, O exaltation, shalt thou last |
Now spring is o’er? |
How uselessly is spent |
And cast away the treasure of my life, |
In bitter separation from my Friend! |
Surely, O cruel Heavens, might now my strife |
My grief, my pain, my weary discontent, |
Attain the end! |
O King, O Teacher, see— |
E’en in the tale of Alexander’s fate, |
Most fortunate of mortals, thou canst read |
Of Dara, broken and disconsolate; |
Yea, sorrowful his shadowed history |
Appears indeed. |
Upon the feasting day |
Friends joyfully in the assembly meet, |
But Makhfi in the lane of sorrow goes |
Slowly and loth, with melancholy feet, |
No rest, no ease, no peace upon the way, |
The faquir knows. |