The Garden Of The Prophet (3)
erstanding, he lips.
quot;I teac silence, but rat over-loud.
quot;I teacains all men.quot;
And out straigo trees as t a little distance, for t o th.
Only Karima, after s by ts, came unto ;Master, I you suffer me to prepare food against t;
And sa t;My sister, and my beloved, it is done, even from time. terday and our today.
quot;I go, but if I go rut yet voiced, t very truts be scattered t ternity, and again s I may speak of t of those boundless silences.
quot;And if t of beauty t I unto you, tafa, and I s you may kno is lacking, for God suffer o be o lie covered in t of man.
quot;I sh, and I shall sing in your ears
Even after t sea-wave carries me back
to t sea-depth.
I s at your board t a body,
And I so your fields, a spirit invisible.
I so you at your fireside, a guest unseen.
Deat t cover our faces.
till a woodsman,
the ploughman, a ploughman,
And o t also to t;
And till as stones, and grieved in t for t ;I go.quot; But no man put out o stay ter, nor did any folloer steps.
And Almustafa out from t and t, like a blorong s.
And t till stood in t, and s and t if I go rut yet voiced, t very trut;
And no ide.
And eps o t, and ood among te cypress-trees hings, and he spoke and said:
quot;O Mist, my sister, yet held in a mould,
I return to you, a breate and voiceless,
A yet uttered.
quot;O M