-
|
- The
Letter Written by Nestan-Daredjan
- to
Her Beloved
|
- 1290
|
- NOW she sobbing, weeping, writes to her
beloved;
- quenching with her tears the intense fires
that consumed
- him. She wrote a letter piercing the heart of
the hearers.
- She splits the rose; there appears the
translucent crystal.
|
- 1291
|
- "O MINE own! this letter is the work of
my hands; for pen
- I have my form, a pen steeped in gall; for
paper I glue
- thy heart even to my heart; 0 heart, sad
heart, thou art
- bound, loose not thyself, now be bound!
|
- 1292
|
- "THOU seest, 0 mine own! of what deeds
the world is a
- doer. However much light shines, for me it is
but darkness.
- The wise know the world, therefore they
despise it, to them
- it is contemptible. My life without thee, woe
is me! how
- exceeding hard it is!
|
- 1293
|
- "THOU seest, mine own! how Fate and
cursed time hath
- parted us; no longer do I glad see thee, my
glad loved one;
- what, indeed, can the heart rent by thee do
without thee!
- My thought manifests now to thee what was
hidden.
|
- 1294
|
- "BY thy sun! until now I thought not
thou wert alive; as
- for me, methought my life and all my resource
had passed
- away. Now when I hear news of thee, I magnify
the
- Creator and humble myself before God. All
mine erstwhile
- grief I weigh as joy.
|
- 1295
|
- "THY life is sufficient for my heart to
hope in, a heart
- all wounded and so consumed ? Think of me,
remember me
- as one lost to thee; I sit nursing the love I
planted.
|
- 1296
|
- "NOW, 0 mine own, my story is not to be
written to thee
- by me; the tongue will tire, none that hear
will believe!
- P'hatman took me from sorcerers; may God
protect her;
- Now again the world hath done what befits it.
|
- 1297
|
- "WORLD hath now added worse woe to my
woe, mv ill
- luck was not appeased by these manifold
afflictions; and
- again it delivered me into the hands of the
Kadjis, hard
- to combat; Fate hath done to us, mine own,
all that hath
- befallen us.
|
- 1298
|
- "I AM sitting in a castle so lofty that
eyes can scarce
- see the ground; the road enters by a passage,
over it stand
- guards; day and night knights miss not their
turn as
- sentries, they will kill those that engage
them, like fire wil
- l they envelop them.
|
- 1299
|
- "SURELY thou thinkest not that these are
of the same
- kind as other warriors ? Slay me not with
woes worse than
- the present! I shall see thee dead, I shall
be burnt up like
- tinder by steel. Since I am sundered from
thee, renournce
- me with a heart harder than rock itself.
|
- 1300
|
- "BELOVED, sorrow not with such grief!
Tell me, can
- there be fur me another with the form of an
aloe-tree! Life
- without thee is nought for me, henceforth I
should be full
- of regret; either I would cast myself down
from the rock
- or slay myself with a knife.
|
- 1301
|
- "BY thy sun! thy moon will fall to the
lot of none save
- thee! By thy sun! to none shall she fall
though triple suns
- shone forth! Here would I dash myself down;
the great
- rocks are very nigh to me. To thee would I
commit my
- soul; perchance wings would be given to me by
Heaven.
|
- 1302
|
- "ENTREAT God for me; it may he He will
deliver me
- from the travail of ihe world and from union
with fire,
- water, earth and air. Let Him give me wings
and I shall fly
- up, I shall attain my desire—day and night
I shall gaze on
- the sun's rays flashing in splendour.
|
- 1303
|
- "THE sun cannot be without thee, for
thou art an atom of it; of a surety thou shalt adhere to it as its
zodiac, and not as one rejected. There shall I seek thee; I shall
liken thee to it, thou shalt enlighten my darkened heart. If my life
was bitter, let my death be sweet!
|
- 1304
|
- "DEATH is no longer grievous to me,
since it is to thee
- I commit my soul; but I have laid thy love in
my heart,
- and there it rests. When I think of parting
from thee, for me
- wound is added to wound. Weep not and mourn
not for me,
- O mine own, for love of me!
|
- 1305
|
- "GO, betake thyself to India, be of some
help to my
- father, who is straitened by foes, helpless
on all sides;
- comfort the heart of him who suffers
separation from me.
- Think of me weeping for thy sake with
undrying tears.
|
- 1306
|
- "WHATEVER complaint I have made against
my Fate is
- sufficient complaint. Know this, that true
justice goeth
- from heart to heart; for thy sake will I die,
the ravens will
- call me! 1 shall suffice for thy weeping and
suffering.
|
- 1307
|
- "LO, mark the token from the veil that
was thine; from
- one end I have cut off a strip, O mine own;
this is all that
- is left to me in place of that great hope; in
wrath the
- wheel of the seven heavens hath turned upon
us."
|
- 1308
|
- WHEN she had finished this letter written to
her beloved,
- she cut off a fringe from those veils;
bareheaded, the
- thick, long locks other hair became her well,
the scent
- blows from the aloe, breathing through ihe
raven's wings.
|
- 1309
|
- THAT slave departed, journeying to
Gulansharo; in one
- instant he reached P'hatman's, he travelled
not many
- days. When this matter so dear to him had
been
- accomplished, Avt'handil with hands upraised
thanks God.
- with full understanding, not as one bemused.
|
- 1310
|
- HE said to P'hatman: "The thing desired
is timely
- finished for me; thy great zeal for my sake
is still
- unrecompensed. I go, I have no leisure to
tarry longer,
- last year's time is come. Swiftly shall T
lead into Kadjet'hi
- him who will annihilate and destroy
them."
|
- 1311
|
- THE lady said: "O lion, the fire now
becomes hotter; my
- heart will be sundered from its light,
thereby will it be
- darkened; hasten, grieve not for me, the
madman will still
- remain mad. Should the Kadjis arrive before
you, going
- thither will be made difficult for you."
|
- 1312
|
- THE knight called P'hridon's slaves who
attended him.
- He said: "Corpses hitherto, now indeed
are we enlivened;
- we are renewed by the hearing of what we
wished. I shall
- show you our enemies wounded and thereby
woe-stricken.
|
- 1313
|
- "GO and tell P'hridon this unvarnished
story. I cannot
- see him, I am hurried, my road is one of
haste. Let him
- strengthen his great voice to make it still
more bold. I will
- give you all the precious tissues taken by me
as booty.
|
- 1314
|
- "GREAT is the debt laid upon me by you;
I will show my
- gratitude in another way when I join P'hridon
again. For
- the nonce, take away all that was reft from
the pirates;
- I can give you no more than this, I know that
so I shall
- seem to you niggardly.
|
- 1315
|
- "I HAVE no home near; I have no power to
dispense
- gifts." He gave them a ship full,
beautiful things, a host in
- number. He said: "Go, take them away,
travel the road to
- that same region. Give this letter from me,
his sworn
- brother, to P'hridon."
|