1 |
Recall thou to mind My sorrows, My cares and anxieties, My woes and trials, the state of My
captivity, the tears that I have shed, the bitterness of
Mine anguish, and now My imprisonment in this far-off
land. God, O Mustafá, beareth Me witness.
Couldst thou be told what hath befallen the Ancient
Beauty, thou wouldst flee into the wilderness, and
weep with a great weeping. In thy grief, thou
wouldst smite thyself on the head, and cry out as
one stung by the sting of the adder. Be thou grateful
to God, that We have refused to divulge unto thee
the secrets of those unsearchable decrees that have
been sent down unto Us from the heaven of the Will
of thy Lord, the Most Powerful, the Almighty. |
2 |
By the righteousness of God! Every morning I
arose from My bed, I discovered the hosts of countless
afflictions massed behind My door; and every
night when I lay down, lo! My heart was torn with
agony at what it had suffered from the fiendish
cruelty of its foes. With every piece of bread the Ancient
Beauty breaketh is coupled the assault of a
fresh affliction, and with every drop He drinketh is
mixed the bitterness of the most woeful of trials. He
is preceded in every step He taketh by an army of
unforeseen calamities, while in His rear follow legions
of agonizing sorrows. |
3 |
Such is My plight, wert thou to ponder it in thine
heart. Let not, however, thy soul grieve over that
which God hath rained down upon Us. Merge thy
will in His pleasure, for We have, at no time, desired
anything whatsoever except His Will, and have
welcomed each one of His irrevocable decrees. Let
thine heart be patient, and be thou not dismayed.
Follow not in the way of them that are sorely agitated. |