1
Wake! For
the Sun, who
scattered into flight
The Stars
before him from
the Field of Night,
Drives
Night along with them from Heav'n,
and strikes
The
Sultán's Turret with a
Shaft of Light.
2
Before the
Phantom of False
Morning died,
Methought
a Voice within the
Tavern cried,
“When
all the Temple is prepared within,
Why nods
the drowsy
Worshipper outside?"
3
And, as
the Cock crew, those
who stood before
The Tavern
shouted — "Open
then the Door!
You
know how little while we have to stay.
And, once
departed, may
return no more."
4
Now the
New Year reviving
old Desires,
The
thoughtful Soul to
Solitude retires.
Where
the WHITE HAND OF MOSES on the Bough
Puts out,
and Jesus from the
Ground suspires.
5
Iram
indeed is gone with all
his Rose,
And
Jamshyd's Sev'n-ring'd
Cup where no one knows;
But
still a Ruby kindles in the Vine,
And many a
Garden by the
Water blows.
6
And
David's lips are lockt; but
in divine
High-piping
Péhlevi, with
"Wine! Wine! Wine!
Red
Wine!" — the Nightingale cries to
the Rose
That
sallow cheek of hers t'
incarnadine.
7
Come, fill
the Cup, and in
the fire of Spring
Your
Winter-garment of
Repentance fling:
The
Bird of Time has but a little way
To flutter
— and the Bird is
on the Wing.
8
Whether at
Naishápúr or
Babylon,
Whether
the Cup with sweet
or bitter run.
The
Wine of Life keeps oozing drop by
drop,
The Leaves
of Life keep falling
one by one.
9
Each Morn
a thousand Roses
brings, you say;
Yes, but
where leaves the
Rose of Yesterday?
And
this first Summer month that brings
the Rose
Shall take
Jamshyd and
Kaikobád away.
10
Well, let
it take them! What
have we to do
With
Kaikobád the Great, or
Kaikhosrú?
Let
Zál and Rustum bluster as they will.
Or Hátim
call to Supper — heed
not you.
11
With me
along the strip of
Herbage strown
That just
divides the desert
from the sown,
Where
name of Slave and Sultán is forgot —
And Peace
to Mahmúd on his
golden Throne!
12
A Book of
Verses underneath
the Bough,
A Jug of
Wine, a Loaf of
Bread — and Thou
Beside
me singing in the Wilderness —
Oh,
Wilderness were Paradise
enow!
13
Some for
the Glories of This
World; and some
Sigh for
the Prophet's
Paradise to come;
Ah,
take the Cash, and let the Credit go,
Nor heed
the rumble of a
distant Drum!
14
Look to
the blowing Rose
about us — "Lo,
Laughing,"
she says,
"into the world I blow,
At
once the silken tassel of my Purse
Tear, and
its Treasure on
the Garden throw."
15
And those
who husbanded the
Golden grain,
And those
who flung it to
the winds Hke Rain,
Alike
to no such aureate Earth are turn'd
As, buried
once, Men want
dug up again.
16
The
Worldly Hope men set
their Hearts upon
Turns
Ashes — or it prospers;
and anon.
Like
Snow upon the Desert's dusty Face,
Lighting a
little hour or
two — is gone.
17
Think, in
this batter'd
Caravanserai
Whose
Portals are alternate
Night and Day,
How
Sultán after Sultán with his Pomp
Abode his
destined Hour, and
went his way.
18
They say
the Lion and the
Lizard keep
The Courts
where Jamshyd
gloried and drank deep:
And
Bahram, that great Hunter — the Wild
Ass
Stamps
o'er his Head, but
cannot break his Sleep.
19
I
sometimes think that never
blows so red
The Rose
as where some
buried Ccesar bled;
That
every Hyacinth the Garden wears
Dropt in
her Lap from some
once lovely Head.
20
And this
reviving Herb whose
tender Green
Fledges
the River-lip on
which we lean —
Ah,
lean upon it lightly! for who knows
From what
once lovely Lip it
springs unseen!
21
Ah, my
Beloved, fill the Cup
that clears
To-DAY of
past Regrets and
future Fears:
To-morrow!
— Why, To-morrow I may be
Myself
with Yesterday's
Sev'n thousand Years.
22
For some
we loved, the
loveliest and the best
That from
his Vintage
rolling Time hath prest.
Have
drunk their Cup a Round or two
before,
And one by
one crept
silently to rest.
23
And we,
that now make merry
in the Room
They left,
and Summer
dresses in new bloom,
Ourselves
must we beneath the Couch of
Earth
Descend —
ourselves to make
a Couch — for whom?
24
Ah, make
the most of what we
yet may spend.
Before we
too into the Dust
descend;
Dust
into Dust, and under Dust to lie.
Sans Wine,
sans Song, sans
Singer, and — sans End!
25
Alike for
those who for
To-day prepare.
And those
that after some
To-morrow stare,
A
Muezzin from the Tower of Darkness
cries,
“Fools!
your Reward is
neither Here nor There."
26
Why, all
the Saints and
Sages who discuss'd
Of the Two
Worlds so wisely
— they are thrust
Like
foolish Prophets forth; their Words
to Scorn
Are
scatter'd, and their
Mouths are stopt with Dust.
27
Myself
when young did
eagerly frequent
Doctor and
Saint, and heard
great argument
About
it and about: but evermore
Came out
by the same door
where in I went.
28
With them
the seed of Wisdom
did I sow.
And with
mine own hand
wrought to make it grow;
And
this was all the Harvest that I reap'd
—
“I came
like Water, and like
Wind I go."
29
Into this
Universe, and Why
not knowing
Nor
Whence, like Water
willy-nilly flowing;
And
out of it, as Wind along the Waste,
I know not
Whither,
willy-nilly blowing.
30
What,
without asking, hither
hurried Whence?
And,
without asking, Whither
hurried hence!
Oh,
many a Cup of this forbidden Wine
Must drown
the memory of
that insolence!
31
Up from
Earth's Centre
through the Seventh Gate
I rose,
and on the Throne of
Saturn sate
And
many a Knot unravel'd by the Road;
But not
the Master-knot of
Human Fate.
32
There was
the Door to which
I found no Key;
There was
the Veil through
which I might not see;
Some
little talk awhile of Me and Thee
There was
— and then no more
of Thee and Me.
33
Earth
could not answer; nor
the Seas that mourn
In flowing
Purple, of their
Lord forlorn;
Nor
rolling Heaven, with all his Signs
reveal'd
And hidden
by the sleeve of
Night and Morn.
34
Then of
the Thee in Me who
works behind
The Veil,
I lifted up my
hands to find
A
lamp amid the Darkness; and I heard,
As from
Without — "THE
ME WTHIN THEE BLIND!"
35
Then to
the Lip of this poor
earthen Urn
I lean'd,
the Secret of my
Life to learn:
And
Lip to Lip it murmur'd — "While
you live,
Drink!
for, once dead, you
never shall return."
36
I think
the Vessel, that
with fugitive
Articulation
answer'd, once
did live.
And
drink; and Ah! the passive Lip I
kiss'd,
How many
Kisses might it
take — and give!
37
For I
remember stopping by
the way
To watch a
Potter thumping
his wet Clay:
And with
its all-obHterated
Tongue
It murmur'
d — "Gently,
Brother, gently, pray!"
38
And has
not such a Story
from of Old
Down Man's
successive
generations roll'd
Of
such a clod of saturated Earth
Cast by
the Maker into Human
mould?
39
And not a
drop that from our
Cups we throw
For Earth
to drink of, but
may steal below
To
quench the fire of Anguish in some Eye
There
hidden — far beneath,
and long ago.
40
As then
the Tulip for her
morning sup
Of
Heav'nly Vintage from the
soil looks up.
Do
you devoutly do the like, till Heav'n
To Earth
invert you — like
an empty Cup.
41
Perplext
no more with Human
or Divine,
To-morrow's
tangle to the
winds resign,
And
lose your fingers in the tresses of
The
Cypress-slender Minister
of Wine.
42
And if the
Wine you drink,
the Lip you press.
End in
what All begins and
ends in — Yes;
Think
then you are To-day what Yesterday
You were —
To-morrow you
shall not be less.
43
So when
the Angel of the
darker Drink
At last
shall find you by
the river-brink,
And,
offering his Cup, invite your Soul
Forth to
your Lips to quaff
— you shall not shrink.
44
Why, if
the Soul can fling
the Dust aside.
And naked
on the Air of
Heaven ride,
Were't
not a Shame — were't not a Shame
for him
In this
clay carcase
crippled to abide?
45
'Tis but a
Tent where takes
his one day's rest
A Sultan
to the realm of
Death addrest;
The
Sultan rises, and the dark Ferrash
Strikes,
and prepares it for
another Guest.
46
And fear
not lest Existence
closing your
Account,
and mine, should
know the like no more;
The
Eternal Saki from that Bowl has pour'd
Millions
of Bubbles like us,
and will pour.
47
When You
and I behind the
Veil are past.
Oh, but
the long, long while
the World shall last,
Which
of our Coming and Departure heeds
As the
Sea's self should
heed a pebble-cast.
48
A Moment's
Halt — a
momentary taste
Of Being
from the Well amid
the Waste —
And
Lo! — the phantom Caravan has reach'd
The
Nothing it set out from
— Oh, make haste!
49
Would you
that spangle of
Existence spend
About THE
SECRET — quick
about it, Friend!
A
Hair perhaps divides the False and True
—
And upon
what, prithee, may
life depend?
50
A Hair
perhaps divides the
False and True;
Yes; and a
single Alif were
the clue —
Could
you but find it — to the
Treasure-house,
And
peradventure to The
Master too;
51
Whose
secret Presence,
through Creation's veins
Running
Quicksilver-like
eludes your pains;
Taking
all shapes from Mah to Máhi; and
They
change and perish all —
but He remains;
52
A moment
guess' d — then
back behind the Fold
Immerst of
Darkness round
the Drama roll'd
Which,
for the Pastime of Eternity,
He doth
Himself contrive,
enact, behold.
53
But if in
vain, down on the
stubborn floor
Of Earth,
and up to Heav'n's
unopening Door,
You
gaze To-day, while You are You — how
then
To-MORROW,
when You shall be
You no more?
54
Waste not
your Hour, nor in
the vain pursuit
Of This
and That endeavour
and dispute;
Better
be jocund with the fruitful Grape
Than
sadden after none, or
bitter Fruit.
55
You know,
my Friends, with
what a brave Carouse
I made a
Second Marriage in
my house;
Divorced
old barren Reason from my Bed,
And took
the Daughter of the
Vine to Spouse.
56
For "Is"
and
"Is-not" though with Rule and Line,
And
"Up-and-down"
by Logic I define.
Of all
that one should care
to fathom, I
Was never
deep in anything
but — Wine.
57
Ah, but my
Computations,
People say.
Reduced
the Year to better
reckoning? — Nay,
'Twas
only striking from the Calendar
Unborn
To-morrow, and dead
Yesterday.
58
And
lately, by the Tavern
Door agape.
Came
shining through the
Dusk an Angel Shape
Bearing
a Vessel on his Shoulder; and
He bid me
taste of it; and
'twas — the Grape!
59
The Grape
that can with
Logic absolute
The
Two-and-Seventy jarring
Sects confute:
The
sovereign Alchemist that in a trice
Life's
leaden metal into
Gold transmute:
60
The mighty
Mahmud,
Allah-breathing Lord,
That all
the misbelieving
and black Horde
Of
Fears and Sorrows that infest the Soul
Scatters
before him with his
whirlwind Sword.
61
Why, be
this Juice the
growth of God, who dare
Blaspheme
the twisted tendril
as a Snare?
A
Blessing, we should use it, should we
not?
And if a
Curse — why, then,
Who set it there?
62
I must
abjure the Balm of
Life, I must.
Scared by
some
After-reckoning ta'en on trust.
Or
lured with Hope of some Diviner Drink,
To fill
the Cup — when
crumbled into Dust!
63
Oh,
threats of Hell and
Hopes of Paradise!
One thing
at least is
certain — This Life flies.
One
thing is certain and the rest is Lies;
The Flower
that once has
blown for ever dies.
64
Strange,
is it not? that of
the myriads who
Before us
pass'd the door of
Darkness through.
Not
one returns to tell us of the Road,
Which to
discover we must
travel too.
65
The
Revelations of Devout
and Leam'd
Who rose
before us, and as
Prophets bum'd,
Are
all but Stories, which awoke from
Sleep
They told
their comrades,
and to Sleep retum'd.
66
I sent my
Soul through the
Invisible,
Some
letter of that
After-life to spell:
And
by and by my Soul retum'd to me.
And
answer'd "I Myself
am Heav'n and Hell":
67
Heav'n but
the Vision of
fulfill'd Desire,
And Hell
the Shadow from a
Soul on fire.
Cast
on the Darkness into which Ourselves,
So late
emerged from, shall
so soon expire.
68
We are no
other than a
moving row
Of Magic
Shadow-shapes that
come and go
Round
with the Sun-illumined Lantern held
In
Midnight by the Master of
the Show;
69
But
helpless Pieces of the
Game He plays
Upon this
Chequer-board of
Nights and Days;
Hither
and thither moves, and checks, and
slays,
And one by
one back in the
Closet lays.
70
The Ball
no question makes
of Ayes and Noes,
But Here
or There as strikes
the Player goes;
And
He that toss'd you down into the
Field,
He knows
about it all — He
knows — HE knows!
71
The Moving
Finger writes; and,
having writ.
Moves on:
nor all your Piety
nor Wit
Shall
lure it back to cancel half a Line,
Nor all
your Tears wash out
a Word of it.
72
And that
inverted Bowl they
call the Sky,
Whereunder
crawling coop'd
we live and die,
Lift
not your hands to It for help — for
It
As
impotently moves as you
or I.
73
With
Earth's first Clay They
did the Last Man knead.
And there
of the Last
Harvest sow'd the Seed:
And
the first Morning of Creation wrote
What the
Last Dawn of
Reckoning shall read.
74
Yesterday
This Day's Madness
did prepare;
To-MORROW'S
Silence,
Triumph, or Despair:
Drink!
for you know not whence you came,
nor why:
Drink! for
you know not why
you go, nor where.
75
I tell you
this — When,
started from the Goal,
Over the
flaming shoulders
of the Foal
Of
Heav'n Parwin and Mushtari they flung.
In my
predestin'd Plot of
Dust and Soul
76
The Vine
had struck a fibre:
which about
If clings
my being — let the
Dervish flout;
Of
my Base metal may be filed a Key,
That shall
unlock the Door
he howls without.
77
And this I
know: whether the
one True Light
Kindle to
Love, or
Wrath-consume me quite,
One
Flash of It within the Tavern caught
Better
than in the Temple
lost outright.
78
What! out
of senseless
Nothing to provoke
A
conscious Something to
resent the yoke
Of
unpermitted Pleasure, under pain
Of
Everlasting Penalties, if
broke!
79
What! from
his helpless
Creature be repaid
Pure Gold
for what he lent
him dross-allay' d —
Sue
for a Debt he never did contract,
And cannot
answer — Oh, the
sorry trade!
80
Oh Thou,
who didst with
pitfall and with gin
Beset the
Road I was to
wander in.
Thou
wilt not with Predestined Evil round
Enmesh,
and then impute my
Fall to Sin!
81
Oh Thou,
who Man of baser
Earth didst make.
And ev'n
with Paradise
devise the Snake:
For
all the Sin wherewith the Face of Man
Is
blacken'd — Man's
forgiveness give — and take!
82
As under
cover of departing
Day
Slunk
hunger-stricken
Ramazan away.
Once
more within the Potter's house alone
I stood,
surrounded by the
Shapes of Clay.
83
Shapes of
all Sorts and
Sizes, great and small,
That stood
along the floor
and by the wall,
And
some loquacious Vessels were; and some
Listen'd
perhaps, but never
talk'd at all.
84
Said one
among them — "Surely
not in vain
My
substance of the common
Earth was ta'en
And
to this Figure moulded, to be broke.
Or
trampled back to shapeless
Earth again."
85
Then said
a Second —
"Ne'er a peevish Boy
Would
break the Bowl from
which he drank in joy;
And
He that with His hand the Vessel made
Will
surely not in after
Wrath destroy."
86
After a
momentary silence
spake
Some
Vessel of a more
ungainly Make:
“They
sneer at me for leaning all awry:
What! did
the Hand then of
the Potter shake?"
87
Whereat
some one of the
loquacious Lot —
I think a
Sufi pipkin — waxing
hot —
“All
this of Pot and Potter — Tell me then.
Who is the
Potter, pray, and
who the Pot?"
88
"Why,"
said
another, "Some there are who tell
Of one who
threatens he will
toss to Hell
The
luckless Pots he marr'd in making — Pish!
He's a
Good Fellow, and
'twill all be well."
89
“Well,”
murmur'd one, "Let
whoso make or buy.
My Clay
with long Oblivion
is gone dry:
But
fill me with the old familiar Juice,
Methinks I
might recover by
and by."
90
So while
the Vessels one by
one were speaking,
The little
Moon look'd in
that all were seeking:
And
then they jogg'd each other, "Brother!
Brother!
Now for
the Porter's
shoulder-knot a-creaking!"
91
Ah, with
the Grape my fading
Life provide.
And wash
the Body whence the
Life has died.
And
lay me, shrouded in the living Leaf,
By some
not unfrequented
Garden-side.
92
That ev'n
my buried Ashes
such a snare
Of Vintage
shall fling up
into the Air
As
not a True-believer passing by
But shall
be overtaken
unaware.
93
Indeed,
the Idols I have
loved so long
Have done
my credit in this
World much wrong
Have
drown'd my Glory in a shallow Cup,
And sold
my Reputation for a
Song.
94
Indeed,
indeed. Repentance
oft before
I swore —
but was I sober
when I swore?
And
then and then came Spring, and Rose-in-hand
My
thread-bare Penitence
apieces tore.
95
And much
as Wine has play'd
the Infidel,
And robb'd
me of my Robe of
Honour — Well,
I
wonder often what the Vintners buy
One half
so precious as the
stuff they sell.
96
Yet Ah,
that Spring should
vanish with the Rose!
That
Youth's sweet-scented
manuscript should close!
The
Nightingale that in the branches sang.
Ah,
whence, and whither
flown again, who knows!
97
Would but
the Desert of the
Fountain yield
One
glimpse — if dimly, yet
indeed, reveal' d,
To
which the fainting Traveller might
spring,
As springs
the trampled
herbage of the field!
98
Would but
some winged Angel
ere too late
Arrest the
yet unfolded Roll
of Fate,
And
make the stern Recorder otherwise
Enregister,
or quite
obliterate!
99
Ah, Love!
could you and I
with Him conspire
To grasp
this sorry Scheme
of Things entire,
Would
not we shatter it to bits — and
then
Re-mould
it nearer to the
Heart's Desire!
100
Yon rising
Moon that looks
for us again —
How oft
hereafter will she
wax and wane;
How
oft hereafter rising look for us
Through
this same Garden — and
for one in vain
101
And when
like her, oh Saki,
you shall pass
Among the
Guests
Star-scatter' d on the Grass,
And
in your joyous errand reach the spot
Where I
made One — turn down
an empty Glass
Tamam
|