Jahane Rumi

September 29, 2006

Seek the Fountain Within Yourself

Filed under: Rumi, Sufi poetry, World Literature — RR @ 12:47 pm

 There are two kinds of intelligence.
One is that acquired by a child at school
from books and teachers, new ideas and memorization.
Your intelligence may become superior to others,
but retaining all that knowledge is a burden.
You who are so busy searching for knowledge
must be a preserving tablet, but the preserved tablet
is the one who has gone beyond all this.
For the other kind of intelligence is the gift of God:
its fountain is deep within the soul.
When the water of God-given knowledge surges from the breast,
it never stagnates or becomes impure.
And if its way to the outside is blocked, what harm is there?
For it flows continually from the house of the heart.
The acquired intelligence is like the conduits
which run into the house from the streets:
if those pipes become blocked, the house is bereft of water.
Seek the fountain within yourself.

          — Version by Camille and Kabir Helminski
             “Rumi: Jewels of Remembrance”
           

4 Comments »

  1. thank you for sharing this wonderful thought!

    Comment by ayesha — September 30, 2006 @ 8:20 am

  2. Very nice post really

    Comment by jugnoo — September 30, 2006 @ 10:15 am

  3. Thank you.

    This actually touches me intimately in ways I needed to be reminded.

    Kim

    Comment by kimtelas — October 2, 2006 @ 8:39 pm

  4. Such a nice post …!

    Comment by Asma — October 3, 2006 @ 9:31 am

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