The Garden Of The Prophet (1)

The Garden Of The Prophet (1)

Almustafa, the chosen and the beloved, who was a noon unto his own day, returo the isle of his birth in the month of Tichreen, which is the month of remembrance.

And as his ship approached the harbour, he stood upon its prow, and his mariners were about him. And there was a homeing in his heart.

And he spoke, and the sea was in his voice, and he said: "Behold, the isle of our birth. Evehe earth heaved us, a song and a riddle; a song unto the sky, a riddle unto the earth; and what is there betweeh and sky that shall carry the song and solve the riddle save our own passion?

"The sea yields us once more to these shores. We are but another wave of her waves. She sends us forth to sound her speech, but how shall we do so unless we break the symmetry of our heart on rod sand?

"For this is the law of mariners and the sea: If you would freedom, you must urn to mist. The formless is for ever seeking form, even as the tless nebulae would bee suns and moons; and we who have sought mud return now to this isle, rigid moulds, we must beist once more and learn of the beginning. And what is there that shall live and rise unto the heights except it be broken unto passion and freedom?

"For ever shall we be i of the shores, that we may sing and be heard. But what of the wave that breaks where no ear shall hear? It is the unheard in us that nurses our deeper sorrow. Yet it is also the unheard which carves our soul to form and fashion our destiny."

Then one of his mariners came forth and said: "Master, you have captained our longing for this harbour, and behold, we have e. Yet you speak of sorrow, and of hearts that shall be broken."

And he answered him and said: "Did I not speak of freedom, and of the mist which is reater freedom? Yet it is in pain I make pilgrimage to the isle where I was born, even like unto a ghost of one slain e to kneel before those who have slain him."

And another mariner spoke and said: "Behold, the multitudes on the sea-wall. In their silehey have foretold even the day and the hour of your ing, and they have gathered from their fields and vineyards in their loving o await you."

And Almustafa looked afar upon the multitudes, and his heart was mindful of their yearning, and he was silent.

Then a cry came from the people, and it was a cry of remembrand of ey.

And he looked upon his mariners and said: "And what have I brought them? A hunter was I, in a distant land. With aim and might I have spent the golden arrows they gave me, but I have brought down no game. I followed not the arrows. Mayhap they are spreading now in the sun with the pinions of wounded eagles that would not fall to the earth. And mayhap the arrow-heads have fallen into the hands of those who had need of them for bread and wine.

"I know not where they have spent their flight, but this I know: they have made their curve in the sky.

"Even so, loves hand is still upon me, and you, my mariners, still sail my vision, and I shall not be dumb. I shall cry out when the hand of the seasons is upon my throat, and I shall sing my words when my lips are burned with flames."

And they were troubled in their hearts because he spoke of these things. And one said: "Master, teach us all, and mayhap because your blood flows in our veins, and our breath is of your fragrance, we shall uand."

The he answered them, and the wind was in his voice, and he said: "Br

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