Love's ripening : Rumi on the heart's journey

by Maulana Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī

Other authorsKabir Helminski (Translator), Ahmad Rezwani (Translator)
Paperback, 2008

Publication

Imprint: Boston : Shambhala Publications, 2008. Responsibility: Rumi translated by Kabir Helminski and Ahmad Rezwani. OCLC Number: 166255127. Physical: Text : 1 volume : xxxv, 163 pages ; 19 cm. Features: Includes index.

Call number

GT-I-S / Rumi / Helmi

Barcode

BK-07999

ISBN

9781590307595

CSS Library Notes

Description: Here are more of the thrilling verses of the thirteenth-century Sufi saint, in translations that combine unsurpassed beauty and accuracy -- presented in an heirloom-worthy gift edition, with full-cloth cover, sewn binding, and ribbon marker. Helminski and Rezwani's translations stand out not only for their poetic beauty, but for their faithfulness to the Persian originals (a rare thing among English versions of Rumi), and for the theme around which they are focused: the ripening, or spiritual maturing, of the soul as it grows in love toward God and others.

Table of Contents: Within this human condition --
The truth hidden within existence --
Transformation --
Feminine and divine --
The path --
Ecstasy --
Love.

FY2018 /

Physical description

xxxv, 163 p.; 19 cm

Description

Although alone, the lover is never lonely, Forever hidden with the Beloved. Love is the meaning of our existence, the raw material of transformation, the glorious way of access to Divine intimacy. This teaching infuses the lyric verse of Rumi (1207-1273), the greatest of the Sufi poets. The poems in this collection, taken from among the master's many volumes of work, focus on one of his greatest themes: how love grows and matures for those on the spiritual path. Kabir Helminski and Ahmad Rezwani have crafted a translation that remains faithful to the original Persian while giving eloquent expression to the joy of Rumi's astonishing encounter with the Divine. As our love moves on to ever more refined and exalted objects, Rumi declares, the distinction between lover and Beloved becomes irrelevant--and wonderfully so: There is no Love greater than Love with no object, For then you, yourself, have become Love itself.… (more)

Language

Original language

Farsi/Persian

Rating

(3 ratings; 3.3)
Page: 0.1603 seconds