Kabir — "The pupil dilates in darkness and in the end finds light."
The pupil dilates in darkness and in the end finds light.
The pupil dilates in darkness and in the end finds light.
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"Praise flows easily; understanding arrives only when patience is ready."
"I sell mirrors in the city of the blind."
"Me, I'm drunk on love! Why should I connive? I stay free of the world. What friend of it am I? If you leave the one you love, You wander door to door. My friend's inside of me. Who am I waiting for?"
"To listen is to plant a seed in the silent heart."
"The path to God is not in going to Mecca or Varanasi, but in looking within."
Indian mystic poet whose verses (preserved in the Sikh Guru Granth Sahib and the Hindu Bhakti tradition) attacked both Hindu and Islamic orthodoxy. Closely associated with Guru Nanak (founder of Sikhism, who incorporated Kabir's verses). For an intellectual contrast, see Brahmanical priesthood, the ritualistic Hindu establishment of his era — Kabir's poetry is the founding text of bhakti devotional rebellion against ritualistic Hinduism — his verses ridicule caste, ritual purity, and priestly mediation as religious theatre.
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