The Drunken universe: an anthology of Persian Sufi poetry

by Peter Lamborn Wilson

Paper Book, 1987

Status

Available

Call number

891/.551/008

Genres

Collection

Publication

Grand Rapids, Mich. : Phanes Press, 1987.

Description

Sufism can be seen to have functioned as a positive and healthy reaction to the overly rational activity of the philosophers and theologians. For the Sufis, the road to spiritual knowledge could never be confined to the process of purely intellectual activity, without the direct, immediate experience of the Heart. In this book we are concerned with one art that the Sufis made peculiarly their own: poetry. Why should Sufis in general, and Persian Sufis in particular, choose to write poetry? When they wanted to 'be themselves', lovers of the Truth, they needed a language more intense, closer to the centre of human awareness than prose. Truth is beautiful, so when one speaks of it, one speaks beautifully. As the lover sings to his beloved, so did the Sufis to theirs. Love itself creates a taste for this language, so that even the prose writers of Sufism scatter verse throughout their works and create poetic prose. The overwhelming theme of this poetry is the Love relationship between the individual, the lover, and his Beloved, God.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member paradoxosalpha
The selections in this volume are terrific and the translations are lucid. The commentary is fairly restrained--much more could be written about any of the poems--and readers without much familiarity with Islam will probably miss many allusions. The appended "bio-bibliographies" of poets are
Show More
succinct and helpful. The one genuinely bad thing about the book is the calligraphic font in which all the poems are set; it makes reading them more difficult and distracts from the beauty of the language and ideas.
Show Less

Physical description

146 p.; 21 cm

ISBN

0933999658 / 9780933999657
Page: 0.2903 seconds