Farhaad
    Shri  Nathji would sometimes tell the tragic story of Shereen and Farhaad. Shereen  was the daughter of a King, and Farhaad a poor artist who was in love with her.  He painted portraits of Shereen all around town, and this embarassed the King.  Shereen loved Farhaad equally, too, but marriage was not possible because of  the difference of status. The King had Farhaad sent away to a distant place on  an impossible task. He was to cut a mountain rock and divert a stream in the  direction of the kingdom. If he succeeded, he would be given Shereen in  Marriage. Farhaad hit at the mountain with great enthusiasm. His spear could  scarcely dig more than a hole, but he continued in his task, possessed with the  thought of Shereen. And God was pleased with the intensity of his love. He sent  His angel down to earth to tell Farhaad that the stream would follow him  wherever he went. And the stream followed Farhaad towards the kingdom. The King  was impressed. Surely Allah had aided the pious Farhaad. He had no option but  to give Shereen to him.
    But  there was a widow, a jealous woman, who sought to destroy this union. This evil  person came to Farhaad, even as he was approaching Shereen’s garden with the  waters of the stream, and screamed loudly: Shereen is dead!
    The  innocent Farhaad was so shocked by this news that he dashed his head against  his spear and died on the spot. The drops of blood that fell from him formed  themselves into an incomplete verse, on the ground below:
    Jaanaane  maraa baman beyaared
    Een murdaa tanam bado supaared
    Gar bosaa dehad bareen labaanam
    Ta …
    Bring  then my beloved before me,
    And give over my corpse to her,
    If her lips come close to mine and kiss,
    Then …
Many a poet tried to complete the verse after Farhaad’s death, but no one could succeed. The verse finally reached the ears of Shereen, along with the news of Farhaad’s death. Shereen completed the verse herself thus
    Ta …  zindaa shavam ajab madaared
    Then  … If I should come back to life,
    Be not surprised.
    And  immediately afterwards, she lept from her palace window and died, joining  Farhaad in another world.
    Shri  Nathji’s interpretations of these beautiful stories of love turned them into a  new message for the world. He gave the stories a spiritual hue in which  ordinary love and divine love merged into one.
    This  was in contrast to many spiritual teachings and themes in which love was  discarded as worldly attachment. But then, Shri Nathji was the personification  of Love, itself, and it was natural that the theme of love find a large place  in his teachings.
    If  only nations, neighbours, friends and relatives could understand the simple  truth Shri Nathji enunciated, all wars, conflicts, struggles, jealousies and  the resultant sufferings would cease to exist.