The Garden Of The Prophet (2)
quot;Its r I say unto you t if you sound ts of space, you s melody tone and tar sing, t unison.
quot;If my anding, t be until anotone because in your blindness you umbled upon it, tar if so be your er it in t tones and stars as a c all t.quot;
And on t day of temple bells soug;Master, ;
And ood before tree, fearless of empest, and ;t t contains all your s, a love t encompasses all your loves, a spirit t envelops all your spirits, a voice enfolding all your voices, and a silence deeper timeless.
quot;Seek noo perceive in your selffulness a beauty more encing tiful, a song more vast t, a majesty seated upon t a footstool, re in he glimmer of dewdrops.
quot;You al and a staff; seek noo ss.
quot;And if my your s may be broken, and t your questionings may bring you unto t ;
And t, every one, and t; and Almustafa enderness upon t;Let us speak rats t move about your houses and your fields.
quot;You o t ; and you sea and claim it to be distance. But I say unto you t o your neiger sea.
quot;too often do you sing God, te, and yet in trut t you migen to to t forsake t not, my friends, t ted from the branch!
quot;Again I bid you to speak not so freely of God, and one anoto neigo a god.
quot;For anemone in t be her anemone?
quot;It is only you seek t you migo your vast selves; you mighe roads!
quot;My mariners and my friends, it o speak less of God, and, and more of eacand. Yet I entimes in f