Part, Chapter
1 1, 1 | and is therefore beyond human criticism.~Description of
2 1, 5 | illustrate the thesis that human exertions are vain, they
3 1, 5 | Trust in God, as opposed to human exertions.~The beasts said, "
4 1, 5 | drowned in the sea of light?"~Human wisdom, the manifestation
5 1, 5 | On this fair ocean our human forms~Float about, like
6 2, 2 | visible to all grades of human sight.~:~
7 2, 14| the worthlessness of mere human knowledge, and its inferiority
8 3, 12| splendour of "The Friend" in human shape, the Ocean in a drop
9 3, 12| with longing ~To behold in human form the splendours of '
10 4, 2 | the thesis that unaided human reason can discover no now
11 4, 7 | use, clad in the dress of human speech. The words and expressions
12 4, 9 | out of the animal into the human state.~Thus man passed from
13 5, 4 | want a mighty trap to catch human game withal."~God gave him
14 5, 6 | Isa, and not like mere human sighs raised by worldly
15 5, 6 | Which proceeds from mere human joy or sorrow.~These Alif,
16 5, 6 | divine powers,~Whereby all human flesh was confounded.~In
17 5, 6 | bestow bounties, unlike human ability, is unbounded and
18 5, 10| effect on a stupid ass?~Human reason is drowned, like
19 5, 13| the Deity indwells in the human soul; but as he lacked the
20 6, 8 | causing him to see a mere human benefactor, where the real
21 6, 9 | any blessing obtainable by human exertion and contrivance
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