有声读物: Short Poetry Collection 170
- Download Amaryllis audio
- Download Annabel Lee audio
- Download Another Song audio
- Download The Ant Explorer audio
- Download Babel: The Gate of the God audio
- Download Barthram's Dirge audio
- Download Parliament of the Birds audio
- Download Discordants audio
- Download The End of the World audio
- Download Epilogue audio
- Download Flycatchers audio
- Download In The Placid Summer Midnight audio
- Download The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock audio
- Download Oft in the Stilly Night audio
- Download Old Germany audio
- Download O Me! O Life! audio
- Download On a Dead Field-Flower audio
- Download Pomona audio
- Download Preludes audio
- Download The Rainy Day audio
- Download Recognition audio
- Download The Ride on the Ice audio
- Download Sonnet 116 audio
- Download Sonnet 18 audio
- Download Sonnet 73 audio
- Download Spring audio
- Download Sunset audio
- Download To a Child audio
- Download To Oliver Wendell Holmes audio
- Download To The Grammarians. Why He Writes Wantonly audio
- Download We live in deeds, not years audio
- Download What Is To Come We Know Not audio
- Download The Windy Night audio
- Download Written in Edinburgh audio
有声读物类型
作者
描述
This is a collection of 34 poems read by LibriVox volunteers for July 2017.
It includes a longer poem, Parliament of the Birds by Farid ud-Din Attar.
Introduction by the reader: This is one of the best-loved classics of Sufi literature. In his own land, Attar is better known than Rumi or Hafiz. Translation is by Edward Fitzgerald, who 160 years ago brought the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayam to English-speaking audiences.
Lacking governance and beginning to descend into anarchy, the birds come together to agree on leadership. The brilliant and charismatic Tajidar the Wise rises to speak, and proposes that the birds undertake a long and treacherous pilgrimage to seek salvation and transfiguration from Simorgh, the Holy Presence. Each of the birds presents his special reasons for declining the trip, which Tajidar rebuts with a relevant moral tale. The trip will be arduous, and will require each bird to leave behind not just his possessions but his family, his pride, his attachments. But the reward--if Simorgh's grace be granted--will be freedom and knowledge of self and the world. All the birds set out and the vast majority perish along the way. For the thirty that reach their appointment with destiny, there is a surprise in store. Hint: "Simorgh" in Persian can be read to mean "30 birds".
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