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The Garden of the Prophet "part 10"
من ديوان The Garden of the Prophet للشاعر Gibran Khalil Gibran

The Garden of the Prophet "part 10" 
by Gibran Khalil Gibran 


Now, for seven days and seven nights no man came nigh the Garden, and he was alone with
is memories and his pain; for even those who had heard his words with love and patience had
turned away to the pursuits of other days. 

Only Karima came, with silence upon her face like a veil; and with cup and plate within her
hand, drink and meat for his aloneness and his hunger. And after setting these before him, she
walked her way. 

And Almustafa came again to the company of the white poplars within the gate, and he sat
looking upon the road. And after a while he beheld as it were a cloud of dust blown above the
road and coming toward him. And from out the cloud came the nine, and before them Karima
guiding them. 

And Almustafa advanced and met them upon the road, and they passed through the gate, and
all was well, as though they had gone their path but an hour ago. 

They came in and supped with him at his frugal board, after that Karima had laid upon it the
bread and the fish and poured the last of the wine into the cups. And as she poured, she
besought the Master saying: "Give me leave that I go into the city and fetch wine to replenish
your cups, for this is spent." 

And he looked upon her, and in his eyes were a journey and a far country, and he said: 

"Nay, for it is sufficent unto the hour." 

And they ate and drank and were satisfied. And when it was finished, Almustafa spoke in a
vast voice, deep as the seaa and full as a great tide under the moon, and he said: "My
comradess and my road-fellows, we must needs part this day. Long have we climbed the
steepest mountains and we have wrestled with the storms. We have known hunger, but we
have also sat at wedding-feasts. Oftentimes have we been naked, but we have also worn
kingly raiment. We have indeed travelled far, but now we part. Together you shall go your
way, and alone must I go mine. 

"And though the seas and the vast lands shall separate us, still we shall be companions upon
our journey to the Holy Mountain. 

"But before we go our severed roads, I would give unto you the harvest and the gleaning of
my heart: "Go you upon your way with singing, but let each song be brief, for only the songs
that die young upon your lips shall live in human hearts. 

"Tell a lovely truth in little words, but never an ugly truth in any words. Tell the maiden whose
hair shines in the sun that she is the daughter of the morning. But if you shall behold the
sightless, say not to him that he is one with night. 

"Listen to the flute-player as it were listening to April, but if you shall hear the critic and the
fault-finder speak, be deaf as your own bones and as distant as your fancy. "My comrades and
my beloved, upon your way you shall meet men with hoofs; give them your wings. And men
with horns; give them wreaths of laurel. And men with claws; give them petals for fingers. And
men with forked tongues; give them honey words. 

"Ay, you shall meet all these and more; you shall meet the lame selling crutches; and the
blind, mirrors. And you shall meet the rich men begging at the gate of the Temple. "To the
lame give your swiftness, to the blind of your vision; and see that you give of yourself to the
rich beggars; they are the most needy of all, for surely no man would stretch a hand for alms
unless he be poor indeed, though of great possessions. 

"My comrades and my friends, I charge you by our love that you be countless paths which
cross one another in the desert, where the lions and the rabbits walk, and also the wolves and
the sheep. "And remember this of me: I teach you not giving, but receiving; not denial, but
fulfilment; and not yielding, but understanding, with the smile upon the lips. 
"I teach you not silence, but rather a song not over-loud. "I teach you your larger self, which
contains all men." 

And he rose from the board and went out straightway into the Garden and walked under the
shadow of the cypress-trees as the day waned. And they followed him, at a little distance, for
their heart was heavy, and their tongue clave to the roof of their mouth. Only Karima, after she
had put by the fragments, came unto him and said: "Master, I would that you 
suffer me to prepare food against the morrow and your journey." 

And he looked upon her with eyes that saw other worlds that this, and he said: 

"My sister, and my beloved, it is done, even from the beginning of time. The food and the drink
is ready, for the morrow, 
even as for our yesterday and our today. "I go, but if I go with a truth not yet voiced, that very
truth will again seek me and gather me, though my elements be scattered throughout the
silences of eternity, and again shall I come before you that I may speak with a voice born
anew out of the heart of those boundless silences. 

"And if there be aught of beauty that I have declared not unto you, then once again shall I be
called, ay, even by mine own name, Almustafa, and I shall give you a sign, that you may know
I have come back to speak all that is lacking, for God will not suffer Himself to be hidden from
man, nor His word to lie covered in the abyss of the heart of man. 

"I shall live beyond death, and I shall sing in your ears 
Even after the vast sea-wave carries me back 
To the vast sea-depth. 
I shall sit at your board though without a body, 
And I shall go with you to your fields, a spirit invisible. 
I shall come to you at your fireside, a guest unseen. 
Death changes nothing but the masks that cover our faces. 
The woodsman shall be still a woodsman, 
The ploughman, a ploughman, 
And he who sang his song to the wind shall sing it also to the moving spheres." 

And the disciples were as still as stones, and grieved in their heart for that he had said: "I go."
But no man put out his hand to stay the Master, nor did any follow after his footsteps. And
Almustafa went out from the Garden of his mother, and his feet were swift and they were
soundless; and in a moment, like a blown leaf in a strong wind, he was far gone from them,
and they saw, as it were, a pale light moving up to the heights. 

And the nine walked their ways down the road. But the woman still stood in the gathering
night, and she beheld how the light and the twilight were become one; and she comforted her
desolation and her aloneness with his words: "I go, but if I go with a truth not yet voiced, that
very truth will seek me and gather me, and again shall I come."

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الشعر الجاهلي
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شعراء الطفولة
المرآة الشاعرة
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