JAVID NAMA [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

اینجــــا یک کتابخانه دیجیتالی است

با بیش از 100000 منبع الکترونیکی رایگان به زبان فارسی ، عربی و انگلیسی

JAVID NAMA [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Muhammad Iqbal

| نمايش فراداده ، افزودن یک نقد و بررسی
افزودن به کتابخانه شخصی
ارسال به دوستان
جستجو در متن کتاب
بیشتر
تنظیمات قلم

فونت

اندازه قلم

+ - پیش فرض

حالت نمایش

روز نیمروز شب
جستجو در لغت نامه
بیشتر
لیست موضوعات
توضیحات
افزودن یادداشت جدید



MEETING WITH
THE INDIAN
POET BARTARI-HARI









































































The houris in their
palaces and pavilions
my lament provoked to
supreme ardour;
3080
one here put forth her
head from her tent,
another there peeped
out from her chamber and gazed;
to every heart in
eternal Paradise
I gave of the pain and
sorrow of yon terrestrial globe.
A smile played on the
lips of my holy guide
3085
and he said: ‘
magician of Indian stock,
behold now that Indian
minstrel
the grace of whose gaze
converts the dew to pearls.
a broiderer of
subtleties, his name is Bartari,
his nature generous as
the clouds of Azar;
3090
from the meadow he
plucks only the new-sprung buds.
Your melody has drawn
him towards us,
a king who, with a song
sublime,
even in poverty dwells
in lofty exaltation;
with his delicate
thought he designs images of beauty,
3095
a whole world of
meaning hidden in two words.
He is intimate with the
workshop of life,
he is Jamshid, his
poetry Jamshid’s Cup.’
We rose in reverence
for his art
and prepared suitably
to engage with him.
3100

Zinda-Rud













You who have wttered
heart-delighting subtleties,
through whose discourse the East
knows all mysteries,
say. whence comes the fire into
poetry?
Does it come from the Self, or from
God?

Bartari-Hari

































None knows where the
poet is in this world;
3105
his melody springs from
the high notes and the low.
That burning heart
which he has in his breast
finds not repose even
before God.
Our soul’s delight
is in questing;
poetry’s fire is
of the station of desire.
3110
You who are drunk with
wine pressed from the vine of words,
if you should ever
attain to this rank.
with two verses in this
world of stone and brick
one can ravish the
hearts of the houris of Paradise.

Zinda-Rud








I have seen the Indians
twisting this way and that;
3115
it is time you told the
secret of God unveiled.

Bartari-Hari

































These. frail gods are
but of stone and brick;
there is One more
lofty, far from temple and church.
Prostration without the
joy of action is dry and useless;
life is all action,
whether fair or foul.
3120
I will tell you plainly
a word not known to every one—
happy is the man who
has written it on his heart’s tablet.
This world you behold
is not the handiwork of God,
the wheel is yours, and
the thread spun on your spindle.
Prostrate yourself
before the Law of action’s reward,
3125
for from action are
born Hell, Purgatory and Paradise.

/ 66