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More copies of this ISBN:This title in other formats:The Essential Rumiby Rumi
Synopses & ReviewsFrom Powells.com:"I don't mean to claim a special relationship with Rumi...but a poet of such astonishing range and depth needs many translators and interpreters. Mystical poetry tries to reveal the apple orchard within the mist of language (Rumi's image). I hope these translations do not thicken that fog; I hope they burn it off!..." Coleman Barks, The Essential Rumi
Though he wrote his extraordinary poems over seven hundred years ago in culture far removed from our own, Persian Sufi Jelaluddin Rumi is today the most widely read poet in America. This is, of course, largely due to the fact that his poems and stories are simple and direct enough for their startling and passionate imagery to travel across such distances of culture and time, but it is also true that Rumi never would have reached such a wide American audience if his work hadn't found the perfect translator in Coleman Barks. With over ten books of Rumi translations, Barks has established himself as the foremost translator of Rumi into English. Rumi's poems in their original Persian reflect a dense musicality rarely if ever found in translation. Barks acknowledges the difference in language and uses American free verse to convey a sense of the work's simplicity. With the best of these translations beautifully collected in The Essential Rumi, in poems which are alternately ecstatic, wise, and hilarious, the prolific poet comes alive in the 20th century. Publisher Comments:Jelaluddin Rumi was born in the year 1207 and until the age of thirty-seven was a brilliant scholar and popular teacher. But his life changed forever when he met the powerful wandering dervish, Shams of Tabriz, of whom Rumi said, ?What I had thought of before as God, I met today in a human being.? From this mysterious and esoteric friendship came a new height of spiritual enlightenment.
When Shams disappeared, Rumi began his transformation from scholar to artist, and his poetry began to fly. Today, the ecstatic poetry of Jelaluddin Rumi is more popular than ever, and Coleman Barks, through his musical and magical translations, has been instrumental in bringing this exquisite literature to devoted followers. Now, for the first time, Barks has gathered the essential poems of Rumi and put them together in this wonderful comprehensive collection that delights with playful energy and unequaled passion. The Essential Rumi offers the most beautiful rendering of the primary poetry of Rumi to both devoted enthusiasts and novice readers. Poems about everything from bewilderment, emptiness, and silence to flirtation, elegance, and majesty are presented with love, humor, warmth, and tenderness. Take in the words of Jelaluddin Rumi and feel yourself transported to the magical, mystical, places of a whirling, ecstatic poet. Review:Brings something of the spiritual fragrance of Rumi into the contemporary American poetic medium and can service as a foretaste of the inner paradise of mystical poetry produced by that colossal figure of Sufi literature, Jalal al-Din Rumi. Seyyed Hossein Nasr, George Washington University Professor of Islamic Studies
Review:At the end of our wanderings there is only the soul's yearning to return to God. No one speaks that yearning better than Rumi. No one, these days, does Rumi better than Coleman Barks. Ram Dass
Synopsis:Though he wrote his extraordinary poems over seven hundred years ago in
culture far removed from our own, Persian Sufi Jelaluddin Rumi
is
today the most widely read poet in America. This is, of course,
largely
due to the fact that his poems and stories are simple and direct
enough
for their startling and passionate imagery to travel across such
distances
of culture and time, but it is also true that Rumi never would have
reached
such a wide American audience if his work hadn't found the perfect
translator
in Coleman Barks. With over ten books of Rumi translations, Barks
has
established himself as the foremost translator of Rumi into
English. With
the best of these translations beautifully collected in The
Essential
Rumi, in poems which are alternately ecstatic, wise, and
hilarious,
the prolific poet comes alive in the 20th century.
Synopsis:A San Francisco Chronicle bestseller, The Essential Rumi translates the estatic poetry of the famed twelfth-century Sufi mystic Jelaluddin Rumi".The gold of Rumi pours down through Coleman's words".--Jack Kornfield. "(A) delightful treasury".--Publishers Weekly.
Synopsis:The Tavern: "Whoever Brought Me Here Will Have to Take Me Home" On the Tavern "In the tavern are many wines-the wine of delight in color and form and taste, the wine of the intellect's agility, the fine port of stories, and the cabernet of soul singing. Being human means entering this place where entrancing varieties of desire are served. The grapeskin of ego breaks and a pouring begins. Fermentation is one of the oldest symbols for human transformation. When grapes combine their juice and are closed up together for a time in a dark place, the results are spectacular. This is what lets two drunks meet so that they don't know who is who. Pronouns no longer apply in the tavern's mud-world of excited confusion and half-articulated wantings."" But after some time in the tavern, a point comes, a memory of elsewhere, a longing for the source, and the drunks must set off from the tavern and begin the return. The Qur'an says, -We are all returning." The tavern is a kind of glorious hell that human beings enjoy and suffer and then push off from in their search for truth. The tavern is a dangerous region where sometimes disguises are necessary, but never bide your heart, Rumi urges. Keep open there. A breaking apart, a crying out into the street, begins in the tavern, and the human soul turns to find its way home."" It's 4 a.m. Nasruddin leaves the tavern and walks the town aimlessly. A policeman stops him. "Why are you out wandering the streets in the middle of the night?" "Sir," replies Nasruddin, "if I knew the answer to that question, I would have been home hours ago!"" Who Says Words with my Mouth?All day I think about it, then at night I say it. This drunkenness began in some other tavern. Who looks out with my eyes? What is the soul? This poetry. I never know what I'm going to say. They say there's no future for us. They're right. A Community of the SpiritThere is a community of the spirit.
A Children's GameListen to the poet Sanai, About the AuthorColeman Barks is a renowned poet and the bestselling author of The Essential Rumi, The Soul of Rumi, Rumi: The Book of Love, and The Drowned Book. He was prominently featured in both of Bill Moyers's PBS television series on poetry, The Language of Life and Fooling with Words. After having taught English and poetry at the University of Georgia for thirty years, he now focuses on writing, readings, and performances. What Our Readers Are SayingAdd a comment for a chance to win!
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