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Through Death's grim gate into the other world: This is my pride that it is granted me To carry with me my desire for thee. They say when I complain of all I bore --It is thy kismet, what would'st thou have more? My rivals also bear thy tyranny, Saying--It is her custom and must be! DAGH. XVI. I met you and the pain of separation was forgot, And all I should have kept in mind my heart remembered not. What cruelty and scorn I in your bitter letters knew! No love was there; O Gracious One, have you forgotten too? Strange is the journey that my soul by wanton Love was led, Two steps were straight and clear, and four forgotten were instead. There was some blundering o'er my fate at the Great Reckoning; You have forgot, O Keeper of the Record, many a thing. You took my heart, but left my life behind: O see you not What thing you have remembered, and what thing you have forgot? To meet Annihilation's sword is the most happy lot That man can gain, for all the joys of earth has he forgot. A Muslim on the path of Love beside a Kafir trod, And one forgot the Kaaba, one the Temple of his God. DAGH. XVII. What happiness is to the lover left Of peace bereft, What freedom for his captive heart remains Held in her chains? Sometimes unto the mountain peaks he goes Driven by his woes, Sometimes within the barren wilderness Hides his distress. Curses on Love, and may his home disgraced Be laid in waste! To me the world and all the joys I sought Are less than naught. Gladly, O Executioner, to Death I yield my breath; And only wonder who shall after me Thy victim be! FIGHAN. XVIII. If you should meet the Loved One as you stray, O give my letter secretly to her, Then haste away And do not tell my name, O Messenger. O Morning Winds that from the garden blow, Should you meet one like me forlorn and sad, On him bestow The peace and solace I have never had. O Eyes that weep and weep unsatisfied, That shed such floods, yet never find relief, O stem your tide Lest you should drown the world in seas of grief. She need not have one anxious doubt of me, She need not fear my further wanderings-- How can I flee? How can a bird escape, deprived of wings? FIGHAN. XIX. How difficult is the thorny way of strife That man hath stumbled in since time began, And in the tangled business of this life How d
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