PoemMathnawi VI: 255-260
Author / PoetRumi
Reference“Rumi: Jewels of Remembrance” by Camille and Kabir Helminski, 1996
TagsBeauty, Importance, Pure, Respect

Wealth has no permanence: it comes in the morning,
and at night it is scattered to the winds.
Physical beauty too has no importance,
for a rosy face is made pale by the scratch of a single thorn.
Noble birth also is of small account,
for many become fools of money and horses.
Many a nobleman’s son has disgraced his father by his wicked deeds.
Don’t court a person full of talent either,
even if he seems exquisite in that respect:
take warning from the example of Iblis1 .
Iblis had knowledge, but since his love was not pure,
he saw in Adam nothing but a figure of clay.

Rumi
Rumi
30 Sep 1207 - 17 Dec 1273
Region: Southern Asia
Period: Medieval
Movement: Sufi

more poems by Rumi

Poem NameTopic
The Ship Sunk In LoveBurn, Love, Sleepless
The Interest Without The CapitalExistence, Love, Reality
Stay Close, My HeartFlowers, Heart, Soul
Love is The MasterDestiny, Fool, Hurricane
Whispers of LoveFool, Whisper
Mathnawi VI: 2955-2962Spirit
At the Hour of the Morning DrinkDrink, Morninge, Truth
Reason Says, “I Will Beguile Him With The Tongue”Angels, Love, Prisoner
I Have Come So That, Tugging Your EarHeart, Rose, Soul
A New RuleCloak, Crown, Drunk

all poems by Rumi

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