
(Wikimedia CC; photo by John Hill)
Here are a couple of passages that I like from Farid al-Din ‘Attar’s twelfth-thirteenth century Persian mystical poem The Conference of the Birds:
The wretches damned in hell will cry
To those in paradise: “O, testify
To us the nature of your happiness;
Describe the sacred joys which you possess!”
And they will say: “Ineffable delight
Shines in the radiance of His face; its light
Draws near us, and this vast celestial frame –
The eightfold heaven – darkens, bowed by shame.”
And then the tortured souls in hell will say:
“From joys of paradise you turn away;
Such lowly happiness is not for you –
All that you say is true, we know how true!
In hell’s accursèd provinces we reign
Clothed head to foot in fire’s devouring pain;
But when we glimpse that radiant face and know
That we must live for ever here below,
Cut off through all eternity from grace –
Such longing seizes us for that far face,
Such unappeasable and wild regret,
That in our anguished torment we forget
The pit of hell and all its raging fire;
For what are flames to comfortless desire?”
And this one, describing — but, importantly, not describing — the ultimate end of the mystic’s quest, union with the divine, reminds me of the apostle Paul’s remark in 2 Corinthians 12:1-5 about it being impossible and/or unlawful to talk about his experience in paradise and in the third heaven:
They knew the state of which no man can speak;
This pearl cannot be pierced; we are too weak. . . .
No stranger followed them, or could unfold
The secrets they to one another told –
Alone at last, together they conferred;
Blindly they saw themselves and deaf they heard –
But who can speak of this? I know if I
Betrayed my knowledge I would surely die;
If it were lawful for me to relate
Such truths to those who have not reached this state,
Those gone before us would have made some sign;
But no sign comes, and silence must be mine.
Here eloquence can find no jewel but one,
That silence when the longed-for goal is one.
The greatest orator would here be made
In love with silence and forget his trade,
And I too cease: I have described the Way –
Now, you must act – there is no more to say.
Posted from Park City, Utah