-
The King
-
Garments
-
The Pearl
-
The River
-
The Frogs
-
Love Song
-
At the Fair
-
Three Gifts
-
The Statue
-
The Dancer
-
The Madman
-
Field of Zaad
-
Two Princess
-
The Wanderer
-
The Exchange
-
Body and Soul
-
Upon the Sand
-
Peace and War
-
Eagle and Skylark
-
Hermit and Beasts
-
Builders Of Bridges
-
Laws & Law Giving
- Tears and Laughters
- Two Guardian Angels
- Yesterday and Today
-
Prophet and The Child
|
|
The
Two Princesses
In the city of
Shawakis lived a prince, and he was loved by everyone, men and women and
children. Even the animals of the field came unto him in greeting.
But all the people said that his wife, the princess, loved him not; nay,
that she even hated him.
And upon a day the princess of a neighboring city came to visit the princess
of Shawakis. And they sat and talked together, and their words led to their
husbands.
And the princess of Sharakis said with passion, "I envy you your happiness
with the prince, your husband, though you have been married these many
years. I hate my husband. He belongs not to me alone, and I am indeed a
woman most unhappy."
Then the visiting princess gazed at her and said, "My friend, the truth is
that you love your husband. Aye, and you still have him for a passion
unspent, and that is life in woman like unto Spring in a garden. But pity
me, and my husband, for we do but endure one another in silent patience. And
yet you and others deem this happiness."
The Quest
A thousand
years ago two philosophers met on a slope of Lebanon, and one said to the
other, "Where goest thou?"
And the other answered, "I am seeking after the fountain of youth which I
know wells out among these hills. I have found writings which tell of that
fountain flowering toward the sun. And you, what are you seeking?"
The first man answered, "I am seeking after the mystery of death."
Then each of the two philosophers conceived that the other was lacking in
his great science, and they began to wrangle, and to accuse each other of
spiritual blindness.
Now while the two philosophers were loud upon the wind, a stranger, a man
who was deemed a simpleton in his own village, passed by, and when he heard
the two in hot dispute, he stood awhile and listened to their arguement.
Then he came near to them and said, "My good men, it seems that you both
really belong to the same school of philosophy, and that you are speaking of
the same thing, only you speak in different words. One of you is seeks the
fountain of youth, and the other seeks the mystery of death. Yet indeed they
are but one, and as they dwell in you both."
Then the stranger turned away saying, "Farewell sages." And as he departed
he laughed a patient laughter.
The two philosophers looked at each other in silence for a moment, and then
they laughed also. And one of them said, "Well now, shall we not walk and
seek together." |

|