We are informed by Muhammad ibn al-Hasan ibn ‘Asim that al-Zubayr ibn ‘Abd al-Wahid reported that al-Rabi‘ ibn Sulayman said: I heard al-Shafi‘i recite these verses (meter: basīṭ):
I wish I had dogs for neighbors
instead of everyone I see.
Dogs in their packs accept guidance.
Human badness will never be tamed.
Tend your soul and keep it secluded.
Life in seclusion can only be praised.
An eminent jurist of our age says something similar, God have mercy on him (meter: basīṭ):
From predations of wild beasts there is refuge.
From human predation, nowhere to flee.
Wild beasts don't bother most people.
From human harm, no mortal is free.
Al-Fudayl ibn ‘Iyad said: "If you see a lion, don't let it alarm you. If you see a son of Adam, hike up your robes and flee."
We report these words on Qubaysa's authority, and also that al-Shafi‘i said: "What do our times resemble, if not the verse by Ta’abbata Sharran (sic)" (meter: ṭawīl):
When the wolf howls, my feelings are friendly.
What startle me are human voices.
‘Ubayd ibn Ayyub al-‘Anbari said something similar after he was pursued by the law for a capital crime he had committed, and fled until he reached a territory unknown to him (meter: ṭawīl):
I was so awake to danger that when a dove flew by,
I said, "Is that a single enemy, or a scouting party?"
If I hear: "It gets better," I say: "It's a trick!"
If I hear: "It gets worse," I say "True! Better get ready!"
I have it on al-Aburi's authority that the jurist Mansur ibn Isma‘il said (meter: mujtathth):
People are the deep sea
Distance from them is a boat
I advise you to look
After your miserable soul
From The Book of Isolation by Abu Sulayman al-Khattabi