CAMELOT FANTASIES

CAMELOT FANTASIES => Camelot Poetry Palace => Topic started by: Clay Death on March 20, 2015, 11:54:32 pm

Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on September 03, 2017, 05:02:37 pm
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Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on September 02, 2017, 11:07:38 pm
[attachimg=1]
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on September 02, 2017, 11:06:53 pm
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Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on April 28, 2017, 06:44:54 pm
Rumi
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on February 14, 2017, 12:39:50 am
Rumi
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on January 07, 2017, 10:44:50 pm
Rumi
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on October 02, 2016, 12:20:10 am
Rumi
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on October 02, 2016, 12:17:05 am
https://youtu.be/9CjMkDpr0qE
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on May 15, 2015, 11:56:52 pm
Mirror Rumi
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on May 09, 2015, 02:36:10 am
Rumi wrote much about it
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Divine Metamorphoses on May 08, 2015, 02:33:35 am
Rumi quote
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Exotic One on March 23, 2015, 02:40:15 am
Good
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Clay Death on March 21, 2015, 09:28:45 am
DESCENT


I made a far journey
 Earth's fair cities to view,
 but like to love's city
 City none I knew

At the first I knew not
 That city's worth,
 And turned in my folly
 A wanderer on earth.

From so sweet a country
 I must needs pass,
 And like to cattle
 Grazed on every grass.

As Moses' people
 I would liefer eat
 Garlic, than manna
 And celestial meat.

What voice in this world
 to my ear has come
 Save the voice of love
 Was a tapped drum.

Yet for that drum-tap
 From the world of All
 Into this perishing
 Land I did fall.

That world a lone spirit
 Inhabiting.
 Like a snake I crept
 Without foot or wing.

The wine that was laughter
 And grace to sip
 Like a rose I tasted
 Without throat or lip.

'Spirit, go a journey,'
 Love's voice said:
 'Lo, a home of travail
 I have made.'

Much, much I cried:
 'I will not go';
 Yea, and rent my raiment
 And made great woe.

Even as now I shrink
 To be gone from here,
 Even so thence
 To part I did fear.

'Spirit, go thy way,'
 Love called again,
 'And I shall be ever nigh thee
 As they neck's vein.'

Much did love enchant me
 And made much guile;
 Love's guile and enchantment
 Capture me the while.

In ignorance and folly
 When my wings I spread,
 From palace unto prison
 I was swiftly sped.

Now I would tell
 How thither thou mayst come;
 But ah, my pen is broke
 And I am dumb.

A..J. Arberry

'Persian Poems', an Anthology of verse translations
 edited by A.J.Arberry, Everyman's Library, 1972











Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Clay Death on March 21, 2015, 09:27:05 am

"NOONE" says it better:




What is the mi'raj12  of the heavens?
 Non-existence.
 The religion and creed of the lovers is non- existence.

Masnavi VI 233   




   

These spiritual window-shoppers,
 who idly ask, 'How much is that?' Oh, I'm just looking.
 They handle a hundred items and put them down,
 shadows with no capital.

 What is spent is love and two eyes wet with weeping.
 But these walk into a shop,
 and their whole lives pass suddenly in that moment,
 in that shop.

 Where did you go? "Nowhere."
 What did you have to eat? "Nothing much."

 Even if you don't know what you want,
 buy _something,_ to be part of the exchanging flow.

 Start a huge, foolish project,
 like Noah.

 It makes absolutely no difference
 what people think of you.

 Rumi, 'We Are Three', Mathnawi VI, 831-845
 





 


I died from minerality and became vegetable;

And From vegetativeness I died and became animal.

I died from animality and became man.

Then why fear disappearance through death?

Next time I shall die

Bringing forth wings and feathers like angels;

After that, soaring higher than angels -

What you cannot imagine,

I shall be that.






 

Soul receives from soul that knowledge, therefore not by book

    nor from tongue.

If knowledge of mysteries come after emptiness of mind, that is

    illumination of heart.





 


If thou  wilt be observant and vigilant, thou wilt see at every moment the response to thy action. Be observant if thou wouldst have a pure heart, for something is born to thee in consequence of every action.






 

I said, 'Thou art harsh, like such a one.'

'Know,' he replied,

'That I am harsh for good, not from rancor and spite.

Whoever enters saying, "This I," I smite him on the brow;

For this is the shrine of Love, o fool! it is not a sheep cote!

Rub thine eyes, and behold the image of the heart.'





 


Make yourself free from self at one stroke!

Like a sword be without trace of soft iron;

Like a steel mirror, scour off all rust with contrition.


Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Clay Death on March 21, 2015, 09:23:57 am
This World Which Is Made of Our Love for Emptiness




Praise to the emptiness that blanks out existence. Existence:
 This place made from our love for that emptiness!

 Yet somehow comes emptiness,
 this existence goes.

 Praise to that happening, over and over!
 For years I pulled my own existence out of emptiness.

 Then one swoop, one swing of the arm,
 that work is over.

 Free of who I was, free of presence, free of dangerous fear, hope,
 free of mountainous wanting.

 The here-and-now mountain is a tiny piece of a piece of straw
 blown off into emptiness.

 These words I'm saying so much begin to lose meaning:
 Existence, emptiness, mountain, straw:

 Words and what they try to say swept
 out the window, down the slant of the roof.




"It is said that after Muhammad and the prophets revelation does not descend upon anyone else. Why not? In fact it does, but then it is not called 'revelation.' It is what the Prophet referred to when he said, 'The believer sees with the Light of God.' When the believer looks with 'The believer sees with the Light of God.' When the believer looks with God's Light, he sees all things: the first and the last, the present and the absent. For how can anything be hidden from God's Light? And if something is hidden, then it is not the Light of God. Therefore the meaning of revelation exists, even if it is not called revelation."
   
Fihi ma fihi [Discourses of Rumi] 
 quoted from William C. Chittick, The Sufi Path of Love:
 The Spiritual Teachings of Rumi
   






 

The drum of the realization of the promise is beating,
 we are sweeping the road to the sky. Your joy is here today, what remains for tomorrow?
 The armies of the day have chased the army of the night,
 Heaven and earth are filled with purity and light.
 Oh! joy for he who has escaped from this world of perfumes and color!
 For beyond these colors and these perfumes, these are other colors in the heart and the soul.
 Oh! joy for this soul and this heart who have escaped
 the earth of water and clay,
 Although this water and this clay contain the hearth of the
 philosophical stone.
   
(Mystic Odes 473) 
 
 




 

At every instant and from every side, resounds the call of Love:
 We are going to sky, who wants to come with us?
 We have gone to heaven, we have been the friends of the angels,
 And now we will go back there, for there is our country.
 We are higher than heaven, more noble than the angels:
 Why not go beyond them? Our goal is the Supreme Majesty.
 What has the fine pearl to do with the world of dust?
 Why have you come down here? Take your baggage back. What is this place?
 Luck is with us, to us is the sacrifice!...
 Like the birds of the sea, men come from the ocean--the ocean of the soul.
 Like the birds of the sea, men come from the ocean--the ocean of the soul.
 How could this bird, born from that sea, make his dwelling here?
 No, we are the pearls from the bosom of the sea, it is there that we dwell:
 Otherwise how could the wave succeed to the wave that comes from the soul?
 The wave named 'Am I not your Lord' has come, it has broken the vessel of the body;
 And when the vessel is broken, the vision comes back, and the union with Him.

   
 

Eva de Vitray-Meyerovitch, 'Rumi and Sufism' trans. Simone Fattal
 Sausalito, CA: Post-Apollo Press, 1977, 1987.
   



   
Our death is our wedding with eternity.
What is the secret? "God is One."
 The sunlight splits when entering the windows of the house.
 This multiplicity exists in the cluster of grapes;
 It is not in the juice made from the grapes.
 For he who is living in the Light of God,
 The death of the carnal soul is a blessing.
 Regarding him, say neither bad nor good,
 For he is gone beyond the good and the bad.
 Fix your eyes on God and do not talk about what is invisible,
 So that he may place another look in your eyes.
 It is in the vision of the physical eyes
 That no invisible or secret thing exists.
 But when the eye is turned toward the Light of God
 What thing could remain hidden under such a Light?
 Although all lights emanate from the Divine Light
 Don't call all these lights "the Light of God";
 It is the eternal light which is the Light of God,
 The ephemeral light is an attribute of the body and the flesh.
 ...Oh God who gives the grace of vision!
 The bird of vision is flying towards You with the wings of desire.
(Mystic Odes 833) 
 




     
I've said before that every craftsman
 searches for what's not there
 to practice his craft.
A builder looks for the rotten hole
 where the roof caved in. A water-carrier
 picks the empty pot. A carpenter
 stops at the house with no door.

Workers rush toward some hint
 of emptiness, which they then
 start to fill. Their hope, though,
 is for emptiness, so don't think
 you must avoid it. It contains
 what you need!
 Dear soul, if you were not friends
 with the vast nothing inside,
 why would you always be casting you net
 into it, and waiting so patiently?

This invisible ocean has given you such abundance,
 but still you call it "death",
 that which provides you sustenance and work.

God has allowed some magical reversal to occur,
 so that you see the scorpion pit
 as an object of desire,
 and all the beautiful expanse around it,
 as dangerous and swarming with snakes.

This is how strange your fear of death
 and emptiness is, and how perverse
 the attachment to what you want.

Now that you've heard me
 on your misapprehensions, dear friend,
 listen to Attar's story on the same subject.

He strung the pearls of this
 about King Mahmud, how among the spoils
 of his Indian campaign there was a Hindu boy,
 whom he adopted as a son. He educated
 and provided royally for the boy
 and later made him vice-regent, seated
 on a gold throne beside himself.

One day he found the young man weeping..
 "Why are you crying? You're the companion
 of an emperor! The entire nation is ranged out
 before you like stars that you can command!"

The young man replied, "I am remembering
 my mother and father, and how they
 scared me as a child with threats of you!
 'Uh-oh, he's headed for King Mahmud's court!
 Nothing could be more hellish!' Where are they now
 when they should see me sitting here?"

This incident is about your fear of changing.
 You are the Hindu boy. Mahmud, which means
 Praise to the End, is the spirit's
 poverty or emptiness.

The mother and father are your attachment
 to beliefs and blood ties
 and desires and comforting habits.
 Don't listen to them!
 They seem to protect
 but they imprison.

They are your worst enemies.
 They make you afraid
 of living in emptiness.

Some day you'll weep tears of delight in that court,
 remembering your mistaken parents!

Know that your body nurtures the spirit,
 helps it grow, and gives it wrong advise.

The body becomes, eventually, like a vest
 of chain mail in peaceful years,
 too hot in summer and too cold in winter.

But the body's desires, in another way, are like
 an unpredictable associate, whom you must be
 patient with. And that companion is helpful,
 because patience expands your capacity
 to love and feel peace.
 The patience of a rose close to a thorn
 keeps it fragrant. It's patience that gives milk
 to the male camel still nursing in its third year,
 and patience is what the prophets show to us.

The beauty of careful sewing on a shirt
 is the patience it contains.

Friendship and loyalty have patience
 as the strength of their connection.

Feeling lonely and ignoble indicates
 that you haven't been patient.

Be with those who mix with God
 as honey blends with milk, and say,

"Anything that comes and goes,
 rises and sets, is not
 what I love." else you'll be like a caravan fire left
 to flare itself out alone beside the road.
   
   
Rumi VI (1369-1420) from 'Rumi : One-Handed Basket Weaving
   



Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Clay Death on March 21, 2015, 12:07:02 am
DEPARTURE

Up, O ye lovers, and away! 'Tis time to leave the world for aye.
 Hark, loud and clear from heaven the from of parting calls-let none delay!
 The cameleer hat risen amain, made ready all the camel-train,
 And quittance now desires to gain: why sleep ye, travellers, I pray?
 Behind us and before there swells the din of parting and of bells;
 To shoreless space each moment sails a disembodied spirit away.
 From yonder starry lights, and through those curtain-awnings darkly blue,
 Mysterious figures float in view, all strange and secret things display.
 From this orb, wheeling round its pole, a wondrous slumber o'er thee stole:
 O weary life that weighest naught, O sleep that on my soul dost weigh!
 O heart, toward they heart's love wend, and O friend, fly toward the Friend,
 Be wakeful, watchman, to the end: drowse seemingly no watchman may.





REMEMBERED MUSIC


'Tis said, the pipe and lute that charm our ears
 Derive their melody from rolling spheres;
 But Faith, o'erpassing speculation's bound,
 Can see what sweetens every jangled sound.

We, who are parts of Adam, heard with him
 The song of angels and of seraphim.
 Out memory, though dull and sad, retains
 Some echo still of those unearthly strains.

Oh, music is the meat of all who love,
 Music uplifts the soul to realms above.
 The ashes glow, the latent fires increase:
 We listen and are fed with joy and peace.





THE SPIRIT OF THE SAINTS


There is a Water that flows down from Heaven
 To cleanse the world of sin by grace Divine.
 At last, its whole stock spent, its virtue gone.
 Dark with pollution not its own, it speeds
 Back to the Fountain of all purities;
 Whence, freshly bathed, earthward it sweeps again,
 Trailing a robe of glory bright and pure.

This Water is the Spirit of the Saints,
 Which ever sheds, until itself is beggared,
 God's balm on the sick soul; and then returns
 To Him who made the purest light of Heaven.





THE TRUE SUFI

What makes the Sufi? Purity of heart;
 Not the patched mantle and the lust perverse
 Of those vile earth-bound men who steal his name.
 He in all dregs discerns the essence pure:
 In hardship ease, in tribulation joy.
 The phantom sentries, who with batons drawn
 Guard Beauty's place-gate and curtained bower,
 Give way before him, unafraid he passes,
 And showing the King's arrow, enters in.
Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Clay Death on March 21, 2015, 12:04:27 am
A Star Without a Name

   

When a baby is taken from the wet nurse,

it easily forgets her

and starts eating solid food.

   

Seeds feed awhile on ground,

then lift up into the sun.

   

So you should taste the filtered light

and work your way toward wisdom

with no personal covering.

   

That's how you came here, like a star

without a name.  Move across the night sky

with those anonymous lights.

   

                (Mathnawi III, 1284-1288)

Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Clay Death on March 21, 2015, 12:03:10 am

This Marriage

May these vows and this marriage be blessed.
 May it be sweet milk,
 this marriage, like wine and halvah.
 May this marriage offer fruit and shade
 like the date palm.
 May this marriage be full of laughter,
 our every day a day in paradise.
 May this marriage be a sign of compassion,
 a seal of happiness here and hereafter.
 May this marriage have a fair face and a good name,
 an omen as welcomes the moon in a clear blue sky.
 I am out of words to describe
 how spirit mingles in this marriage.





Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Clay Death on March 20, 2015, 11:58:18 pm
Be Lost in the Call   



   
Lord, said David, since you do not need us,
 why did you create these two worlds?

Reality replied: O prisoner of time,
 I was a secret treasure of kindness and generosity,
 and I wished this treasure to be known,
 so I created a mirror: its shining face, the heart;
 its darkened back, the world;
 The back would please you if you've never seen the face.

Has anyone ever produced a mirror out of mud and straw?
 Yet clean away the mud and straw,
 and a mirror might be revealed.

Until the juice ferments a while in the cask,
 it isn't wine. If you wish your heart to be bright,
 you must do a little work.

My King addressed the soul of my flesh:
 You return just as you left.
 Where are the traces of my gifts?

We know that alchemy transforms copper into gold.
 This Sun doesn't want a crown or robe from God's grace.
 He is a hat to a hundred bald men,
 a covering for ten who were naked.

Jesus sat humbly on the back of an ass, my child!
 How could a zephyr ride an ass?
 Spirit, find your way, in seeking lowness like a stream.
 Reason, tread the path of selflessness into eternity.

Remember God so much that you are forgotten.
 Let the caller and the called disappear;
 be lost in the Call.

-
"Love is a Stranger", Kabir Helminski
 Threshold Books, 1993






 




O you who've gone on pilgrimage -
               where are you, where, oh where?
 Here, here is the Beloved!
               Oh come now, come, oh come!
 Your friend, he is your neighbor,
              he is next to your wall -
You, erring in the desert -
              what air of love is this?
 If you'd see the Beloved's
               form without any form -
You are the house, the master,
               You are the Kaaba, you! . . .
 Where is a bunch of roses,
               if you would be this garden?
 Where, one soul's pearly essence
               when you're the Sea of God?
 That's true - and yet your troubles
               may turn to treasures rich -
How sad that you yourself veil
               the treasure that is yours!

Rumi 'I Am Wind, You are Fire'
 Translation by Annemarie Schimmel







Oh, if a tree could wander
      and move with foot and wings!
 It would not suffer the axe blows
      and not the pain of saws!
 For would the sun not wander
      away in every night ?
 How could at ev?ry morning
      the world be lighted up?
 And if the ocean?s water
      would not rise to the sky,
 How would the plants be quickened
      by streams and gentle rain?
 The drop that left its homeland,
      the sea, and then returned ?
 It found an oyster waiting
      and grew into a pearl.
 Did Yusaf not leave his father,
      in grief and tears and despair?
 Did he not, by such a journey,
      gain kingdom and fortune wide?
 Did not the Prophet travel
      to far Medina, friend?
 And there he found a new kingdom
      and ruled a hundred lands.
 You lack a foot to travel?
      Then journey into yourself!
 And like a mine of rubies
      receive the sunbeams? print!
 Out of yourself ? such a journey
      will lead you to your self,
 It leads to transformation
      of dust into pure gold!


Look! This is Love - Poems of Rumi,
 Annemarie Schimme






Come, come, whoever you are.

Wonderer, worshipper, lover of leaving.

It doesn't matter.

Ours is not a caravan of despair.

Come, even if you have broken your vow

a thousand times

Come, yet again, come, come.





 

We are as the flute, and the music in us is from thee;
 we are as the mountain and the echo in us is from thee.

 We are as pieces of chess engaged in victory and defeat:
 our victory and defeat is from thee, O thou whose qualities are comely!

 Who are we, O Thou soul of our souls,
 that we should remain in being beside thee?

 We and our existences are really non-existence;
 thou art the absolute Being which manifests the perishable.

 We all are lions, but lions on a banner:
 because of the wind they are rushing onward from moment to moment.

 Their onward rush is visible, and the wind is unseen:
 may that which is unseen not fail from us!

 Our wind whereby we are moved and our being are of thy gift;
 our whole existence is from thy bringing into being.

 
Masnavi Book I, 599-607
 
 


 
On the DeathbedGo, rest your head on a pillow, leave me alone;
 leave me ruined, exhausted from the journey of this night,
 writhing in a wave of passion till the dawn.
 Either stay and be forgiving,
 or, if you like, be cruel and leave.
 Flee from me, away from trouble;
 take the path of safety, far from this danger.
 We have crept into this corner of grief,
 turning the water wheel with a flow of tears.
 While a tyrant with a heart of flint slays,
 and no one says, "Prepare to pay the blood money."
 Faith in the king comes easily in lovely times,
 but be faithful now and endure, pale lover.
 No cure exists for this pain but to die,
 So why should I say, "Cure this pain"?
 In a dream last night I saw
 an ancient one in the garden of love,
 beckoning with his hand, saying, "Come here."
 On this path, Love is the emerald,
 the beautiful green that wards off dragonsnough, I am losing myself.
 If you are a man of learning,
 read something classic,
 a history of the human struggle
 and don't settle for mediocre verse.
Kulliyat-i-Shams 2039
   






Title: Re: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Clay Death on March 20, 2015, 11:57:05 pm
Welcome to our Poems by Rumi place.

Rumi may be America's most read poet.


We will start a thread for him to enjoy and celebrate his poetry.



Please feel free to post anywhere here or anywhere at Camelot.



Post away and have fun.
Title: POEMS BY RUMI
Post by: Clay Death on March 20, 2015, 11:54:32 pm
WELCOME TO POEMS BY RUMI                                  WELCOME TO POEMS BY RUMI                 WELCOME TO POEMS BY RUMI