Nothing (is left to me) but Kufah which I can hold and extend (which is in my hand to play with). (O' Kufah) if this is your condition that whirlwinds continue blowing through you then Allah may destroy you.
O' `Amr! By your good father's life. I have received only a small bit of fat from this pot (fat that remains sticking to it after it has been emptied).
I have been informed that Busr has overpowered Yemen. By Allah, I have begun thinking about these people that they would shortly snatch away the whole country through their unity on their wrong and your disunity (from your own right), and separation, your disobedience of your Imam in matters of right and their obedience to their leader in matters of wrong, their fulfilment of the trust in favour of their master and your betrayal, their good work in their cities and your mischief. Even if I give you charge of a wooden bowl I fear you would run away with its handle.
O' my Allah they are disgusted of me and I am disgusted of them. They are weary of me and I am weary of them. Change them for me with better ones and change me for them with worse one. O' my Allah melt their hearts as salt melts in water. By Allah I wish I had only a thousand horsemen of Banu Firas ibn Ghanm (as the poet says):
If you call them the horsemen would come to you like the summer cloud.
(Thereafter Amir al-mu'minin alighted from the pulpit):
as-Sayyid ar-Radi says: In this verse the word "armiyah" is plural of "ramiyy" which means cloud and "hamim" here means summer. The poet has particularised the cloud of summer because it moves swiftly. This is because it is devoid of water while a cloud moves slowly when it is laden with rain. Such clouds generally appear (in Arabia) in winter. By this verse the poet intends to convey that when they are called and referred to for help they approach with rapidity and this is borne by the first line "if you call them they will reach you."
(1). When after arbitration
Mu`awiyah's position was stabilised he began thinking of taking
possession of Amir al-mu'minin's cities and extend his domain.
He sent his armies to different areas in order that they might
secure allegiance for Mu`awiyah by force. In this connection he
sent Busr ibn Abi Artat to Hijaz and he shed blood of thousands
of innocent persons from Hijaz upto Yemen, burnt alive tribes
after tribes in fire and killed even children, so much so that
he butchered two young boys of `Ubaydullah ibn `Abbas the Governor
of Yemen before their mother Juwayriyah bint Khalid ibn Qaraz
al-Kinaniyyah.
When Amir al-mu'minin came to know of his slaughtering
and blood shed he thought of sending a contingent to crush him
but due to continuous fighting people had become weary and showed
heartlessness instead of zeal. When Amir al-mu'minin observed
their shirking from war he delivered this sermon wherein he roused
them to enthusiasm and self respect, and prompted them to jihad
by describing before them the enemy's wrongfulness and their own
short-comings. At last Jariyah ibn Qudamah as-Sa`di responded
to his call and taking an army of two thousand set off in pursuit
of Busr and chased him out of Amir al-mu'minin's domain.
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Forward to Sermon 26.
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