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Sheikh Muslih-uddin Sa'di Shirazi
Gulistan of Sa'di

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  • Chapter II - THE MORALS OF DERVISHES
    • Story 39
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Story 39
 
 
  The son of a faqih said to his father: 'These heart-ravishing
words of moralists make no impression upon me because I do not see
that their actions are in conformity with their speeches.'
 
 
        They teach people to abandon the world
        But themselves accumulate silver and corn.
        A scholar who only preaches and nothing more
        Will not impress anyone when he speaks.
        He is a scholar who commits no evil,
        Not he who speaks to men but acts not himself.
 
 
  Will you enjoin virtue to mankind and forget your own souls?
 
 
      A scholar who follows his lusts and panders to his body
      Is himself lost although he may show the way.
 
 
  The father replied: 'My son, it is not proper merely on account of
this vain fancy to turn away the face from the instruction of
advisers, to travel on the road of vanity, to accuse the ullemma of
aberration, and whilst searching for an immaculate scholar, to
remain excluded from the benefits of knowledge, like a blind man who
one night fell into the mud and shouted: "O Musalmans, hold a lamp
on my path." Whereon a courtesan who heard him asked: "As thou canst
not see the lamp, what wilt thou see with the lamp?" In the same way
the preaching assembly is like the shop of a dealer in linen because
if thou bringest no money thou canst obtain no wares and if thou
bringest no inclination to the assembly thou wilt not get any
felicity.'
 
 
        He said: 'Listen with thy soul's ear to a scholar
        Although his actions may not be like his doctrines.'
        In vain does the gainsayer ask:
        'How can a sleeper awaken a sleeper?
        A man must receive into his ears
        The advice although it be written on a wall.'
 
 
  A pious man came to the door of a college from a monastery.
  He broke the covenant of the company of those of the Tariq.
  I asked him what the difference between a scholar and a monk
    amounts to?
  He replied: 'The former saves his blanket from the waves
  Whilst the latter strives to save the drowning man.'
 
 
 
 



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