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Showing posts from January 12, 2025

Outstanding

Your love is the greatest of my sorrows.

O Beloved of My Soul Do not complain of my melancholy, Nor be troubled by my weariness, Your love is the greatest of my sorrows. Here, take my face, my hand— Read my cup and interpret for me: How do your eyes dwell within my grief? How do your doves invade me, Roaming freely in my gardens and boughs? I wake and I sleep, Yet my visions remain restless, Woven with silk of your hands, Swaying to the honey of your lips and melodies. O woman to whom I whisper my passion, My madness, and my wounds, Yet each confession to her Plunges me deeper into my dreams. O one whose brows are pharaonic, Approaching like a graceful gazelle, A sea that swallows me whole With waves of tenderness. O you whom my perfumes recognize, And from whose eyes my colors spring forth— A woman who reigns over my pages, A sultana enthroned upon my poetry. O woman who inhabits all my days, My nights, my very time itself— Do not fret over my unease, Nor the tremor in my eyes and fingers. Simply wrap me in your warmth, Brus...

Through the Flames: Resilience in Arabic Poetry and the California Wildfires

  Through the Flames: Resilience in Arabic Poetry and the California Wildfires Wildfires have once again captured the world's attention, with the recent blazes in California highlighting both the destructive power of nature and the resilience of human communities. As devastating as these fires are, they also bring to mind the symbolic and metaphorical use of fire in literature. In Arabic poetry and prose, fire is a recurring theme, representing destruction, purification, passion, and renewal. By examining these motifs, we can gain a deeper understanding of resilience and hope, which resonate strongly in times of calamity like the California wildfires. Fire in Arabic Poetry: A Symbol of Duality Fire has long been a powerful symbol in Arabic literature. It embodies a duality—a force that can destroy but also ignite renewal and transformation. For example, pre-Islamic poetry often invoked the imagery of campfires, which served as beacons of hospitality, warmth, and life in the vast...