Image for Hafiz of Shiraz

Hafiz of Shiraz : Thirty Poems: An Introduction to the Sufi Master

See all formats and editions

Hafiz was born at Shiraz, in Persia, some time after 1320, and died there in 1389.

He is, then, on almost exact contemporary of Chaucer.

His standing in Persian literature ranks him with Shakespeare and Goethe.

A Sufi, Hafiz lived in troubled times. Cities like Shiraz fell prey to the ambitions of one marauding prince after another and knew little peace.

The nomads of Central Asia finally overthrew the rule of these princes, and led to the establishment of the succeeding Timurid Dynasty.

It is of utmost literary interest that a poet who has remained immensely popular and most frequently quoted in his own land should, for the universality and grace of his wisdom and wit, be known outside the land of his birth as he used to be, the subject of veneration among literati both in Europe and the United States.

The time for revival of interest in a poet of such cosmopolitan appeal is overdue.

His poems celebrate the love, wine, and the fellowship of all creatures.

This volume, first published in 1952, brings back into print at last the renderings, the most beautiful and faithful in English, of this greatest of Persion writers.

Hafiz was said to have received miraculously the gift of poetry from Khizr, a mysterious personage of Near Eastern folklore--a sort of roaming scholar, who had discovered the Elixir of Life, and who appeared from time to time to ordinary mortals.

Like all the Persion poets of the Middle Ages, Hafiz was a courtpoet and a panegyrist.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£10.50 Save 25.00%
RRP £14.00
Product Details
Other Press LLC
1590510704 / 9781590510704
Paperback / softback
17/09/2003
United States
104 pages
128 x 194 mm, 113 grams