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work for our living by day and spin thread by night; and oftentimes, the cressets of the watch of Baghdad pass by and we on the roof spinning by their light. Is this forbidden to us?” “Who art thou?” asked Ahmed. “I am the sister of Bishr el Hafi,” replied she. “O household of Bishr,” rejoined the Imam, “I shall never cease to quaff full draughts of piety and continence from your hearts.” Quoth one of the learned, “When God wills well to any man, he opens upon him the gate of action.” Malik ibn Dinar,[1] when he passed through the bazaar and saw aught that he wished for, was wont to say, “O soul, take patience, for I will not accord to thee what thou desirest.” He said also (may God accept of him), “The salvation of the soul lies in resistance to its desires and its ruin in submission to them.” Quoth Mensour ben Ammar,[2] “I set out one year on the pilgrimage and was making for Mecca by way of Cufa, when, one overcast night, I heard a voice crying out from the womb of the night and saying, ‘O my God, by Thy power and Thy glory, I meant not by my disobedience to transgress against Thee, for indeed I am not ignorant of Thee; but my fault is one Thou didst fore-ordain to me from all eternity; so do Thou pardon me my sin, for indeed I disobeyed Thee of my ignorance!’ When he had made an end of his prayer, he recited aloud the verse, ‘O ye who believe, keep yourselves and your households from the fire whose fuel is men and stones!’[3] Then I heard a fall, but knew not what it was and passed on. On the morrow, as we went our way, we fell in with a funeral train, followed by an old woman, whose strength had left her. I questioned her of the dead, and she replied, ‘This is the funeral of a man who passed by us yesterday, whilst my son was standing at prayer.