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- The Letter of Love
Written by P’hatman to Avt’handil
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- 1083
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- "O SUN, since it pleaspd God to create thee a sun, thus
- a joy and not a desirer of woes to them removed from thee,
- a burner of those near united, a consumer of them with fire,
- thy glance seems sweet to the planets, a thing to be boasted
- of.
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- 1084
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- "THEY that gaze on thee become enamoured of thee; for
- thy sake piteously they faint. Thou art the rose; I marvel
- why nightingales quiver not on thee. Thy beauty withers
- the flowers, and mine too are fading. If the sunbeams reach
- me not timely I am quite scorched.
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- 1085
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- "GOD is my witness that I fear to tell you this, but,
- luckless, what can I do for myself? I am quite parted from
- patience; the heart cannot constantly endure the piercing
- of the black lashes! If by any means thou canst help me,
- then help, lest I lose my wits.
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- 1086
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- "TILL an answer to this letter reaches me, till I know if
- thou wilt slay me or reassure me - till then shall I endure life.
- however much my heart pains me. Oh for the time when life
- or death will be decided for me!"
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- 1087
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- DAME P'hatman wrote and sent the letter to the knight.
- The knight read it as if it were from a sister or kinswoman;
- he said: "She knows not my heart. Who is she who courts
- the lover of her whose I am ? The beloved I have-how can
- I compare her beauty to this one's ?"
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- 1088
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- SAID he: "What hath the raven to do with the rose, or
- what have they in common ? But upon it the nightingale
- has not yet sweetly sung. Every unfitting deed is brief, and
- then it is fruitless. What says she? What nonsense she talks!
- What a letter she has written!"
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- 1089
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- THIS kind of thought he thought in his heart. Then said
- he to himself: "Save thee I have no helper. For the sake of
- that for which I am a wanderer, since I wish to seek her
- I will do everything by which I can find her; what else
- should my heart heed !
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- 1090
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- "THIS woman sits here seeing many men, a keeper of
- open house and a friend to travellers coming hither from
- all parts. I will consent, she will tell me all; however much
- the fire burns me with its flames, perchance she will be of
- some use to me; I shall know how to pay my debt to her."
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- 1091
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- HE said: "When a woman loves anyone, becomes intimate
- with him and gives him her heart, shame and dishonour she
- weighs not, being wholly accursed; whatever she know she
- declares, she tells every secret. It is better for me. I will
- consent; perchance I shall somewhere find out the hidden
- thing."
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- 1092
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- AGAIN he said: "None can do aught if his planet favour
- him not; so what I want I have not, what I have I want
- not. The world is a kind of twilight, so here all is dusky.
- Whatever is in the pitcher, the same flows forth."
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