Part, Chapter
1 1, 4 | seem lifeless, but to God living.~In God's presence fire
2 1, 16| our life is lost;~A life living without Thee esteem as dead!~
3 2, 2 | his own house instead of living on the prisoners. The pauper
4 2, 10| entered it,~But none but That Living One enters this house;~When
5 3, 6 | a mistress, but not the living one.~The mere Sufi is the "
6 3, 9 | Consumed by lusts and riotous living,~Having sold all his clothes
7 3, 10| be dead or though they be living,~Are they not equally visible
8 3, 17| soul is for life and the living one, ~Because its origin
9 5, 12| who has once embraced a living mistress will never put
10 5, 13| love made them, as it were, living beings to him? The eye sees
11 5, 13| I am better off than the living who are rejected of God;~
12 6, 2 | inanimate seed became a living man.~O Light on high! what
13 6, 2 | flee away when there is no living away?~Without Thy sustaining
14 6, 5 | of the dead, but of the living." The Sufi was dissatisfied
15 6, 7 | great affection for a frog living in a neighboring pond. 7
16 6, 8 | helpless than men still living in the body. This is illustrated
17 6, 8 | of Tabriz who were still living.~The poor man's regrets
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