In the odes He revealed, whilst wrapped in His devotions during those days of utter seclusion, and in the prayers and soliloquies which, in verse and prose, both in Arabic and Persian, poured from His sorrow-laden soul, many of which He was wont to chant aloud to Himself, at dawn and during the watches of the night, He
- lauded the names and attributes of His Creator,
- extolled the glories and mysteries of His own Revelation,
- sang the praises of that Maiden that personified the Spirit of God within Him,
- dwelt on His loneliness and His past and future tribulations,
- expatiated upon the blindness of His generation, the perfidy of His friends and the perversity of His enemies,
- affirmed His determination to arise and, if needs be, offer up His life for the vindication of His Cause,
- stressed those essential pre-requisites which every seeker after Truth must possess, and
- recalled, in anticipation of the lot that was to be His,
- the tragedy of the Imám Husayn in Karbilá,
- the plight of Muhammad in Mecca,
- the sufferings of Jesus at the hands of the Jews,
- the trials of Moses inflicted by Pharaoh and his people and
- the ordeal of Joseph as He languished in a pit by reason of the treachery of His brothers.
(Shoghi Effendi, ‘God Passes By’, chapter 7)