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| Subject: Pre-Islamic Poetry Wed Aug 27, 2008 2:03 pm | |
| Many Muslims claim that Quran is a unique book and no one can bring a surah like it.(I'll do it as soon as they make a soft drink better than Coke.) You can also say,Quran doesn't have any pictures in it,so it's not the best and most complete book. - Quote :
- [size=180]H[/size][size=140]istory : Pre-Islamic poetry :
[/size] [size=150] *[/size] Poetry held an important position in pre-Islamic society with the poet or sha'ir filling the role of historian, soothsayer and propagandist. Words in praise of the tribe or qit'ah and lampoons denigrating other tribes hija' seem to have been some of the most popular forms of the early poetry. The sha'ir(poetry) represented an individual tribe's prestige . [size=150] *[/size]The very best of these early poems were collected in the 8th century as the Mu'allaqat meaning "the hung poems" and the Mufaddaliyat meaning al-Mufaddal's examination or anthology. The former is named "the hung poems" being hung on the Kaaba.(Currently verses from quran are on Kaaba) [size=150] *[/size]Alongside the sha'ir, and often as his poetic apprentice, is the rawi or reciter. The job of the rawi was to learn the poems by heart and to recite them with explanations and probably often with embellishments. This tradition would allow the transmission of these poetic works and the practice would be adopted later by the hafiz for their memorisation of the Qur'an. [size=150] *[/size]There are several characteristics that distinguish the pre-Islamic poetry from the poetry of later times. One of these characteristics is that in pre-Islamic poetry more attention was given to the eloquence and the wording of the verse (البيت) than to the poem as whole. This resulted in poems characterized by strong vocabulary and short ideas but with loosely connected verses. - Quote :
[size=180]P[/size][size=140]re-Islamic Poets ;[/size] [size=130] Zuhayr ibn Abî Sûlmâ[/size] Pagan poet.In the Arabic poetry of the pre-Islamic period, there are verses which might have been composed by a Muslim, such as these by Zuhair - Quote :
- Do not hide what is in your souls from Allah,
for however carefully it may be hidden and concealed,
Allah will know it!
Either it will be adjourned, put into a book,
and stored for a day of reckoning, or it will come up soon and be requited.
The Hanged Poems
- Quote :
Zuhayr says at the end of his poem in one of his sententiae : 49.(54.) The one who is afraid of the cords of the Fate of death will nevertheless meet it,even though he climbs to the cords of heaven with a ladder.
Spanish Hebrew Poetry and the Arabic Literary Tradition by Arie Schipper
[size=125] Muhammed and Zuhayr:[/size] - Quote :
One day Prophet Muhammad and Abu Bakr were approaching a tribe, and among the people of this tribe was a poet. Poets at that time were people of culture and arts. Abu Bakr pointed at a man and told Prophet Muhammad that that was Zohayr the poet. When it was time for shaking hands with men of the tribe, each man was introduced to Prophet Muhammad and when this man was introduced by name, Prophet Muhammad commented “Oh, the poet!” This man commented afterwards that he had never been pleased by something as he was pleased when Prophet Muhammad recognised him.
Dar-Al Islam Live
- Quote :
- Thus Al-Bukhari, when commenting on this Ayah, reported a narration from Anas bin Malik that the Messenger of Allah used to pray:
«أَعُوذُ بِكَ مِنَ الْبُخْلِ وَالْكَسَلِ وَالْهَرَمِ، وَأَرْذَلِ الْعُمُرِ وَعَذَابِ الْقَبْرِ، وَفِتْنَةِ الدَّجَّالِ وَفِتْنَةِ الْمَحْيَا وَالْمَمَات»
(I seek refuge with You from miserliness, laziness, old age, senility, the punishment of the grave, the Fitnah of the Dajjal and the trials of life and death.) Zuhayr bin Abi Sulma said, in his famous Mu`allaqah: "I became exhausted from the responsibilities of life. Whoever lives for eighty years, no wonder he is tired. I saw death hitting people like a crazed camel, and whoever it hit dies, but whoever is not hit lives until he grows old.''
Tafsir Ibn Kathir
*[size=100]Zohayr's biography : Encyclopedia of Arabic Literature By Julie Scott Meisami, Paul Starkey [/size][size=130]Labīd[/size]Labid is the only one of these poets who embraced Islam His Mo`allaga, however, like almost all his other poetical works belongs to the pagan period. Pre-Islamic poems of his ; - Quote :
Yea, everything is vain, except only Allah alone, and every pleasant thing must one day vanish away!
Yea, everything is vain, except only Allah alone, and every pleasant thing must one day vanish away! The Mu‘allaqat;Sacred Text Archive
[size=125]Muhammed and Labid[/size] - Quote :
- Book 028, Number 5608:
Abu Huraira reported: I heard Allah's Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: The truest word which the poet stated is the word of Labid:" Behold! apart from Allah everything is vain."
Sahih Muslim book 28(Number 5604,5605,5608) [size=130] Umayya b. Abu Salt[/size] Arab poet,contemporary of muhammed,he is said to have refused to accept muhammed as prophet of god,yet she invited people to monotheism in her poems.Concepts of recognition of one personal god,last judgment day,hell and paradise and appeal for amoral life can be found in Umayyas poems. Islamic Desk Reference by E.J. van Donzel - Quote :
- One who flees from his death,will approach in
one moment of inattention he will be called to it
He who does not die in prime of life will die in old age Death has a cup and a man will taste of it
Proximity and Distance by Joseph Tobi and Murray Rosovsky - Quote :
Praise be to god at our entering upon the evening,and at our entering upon the morning! May my lord make us pas the morning and make us pass the evening ,in weal.
Arabic Morphology and Phonology by Ahmad ibn Ali ibn Masud,Joyce Akesson
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