Pilgrim, Pilgrimage, and Road, Was but Myself toward Myself; and Your Arrival but Myself at my own Door; Who in your Fraction of Myself behold Myself within the Mirror Myself hold To see Myself in, and each part of Me That sees himself, though drown'd,... Letters and Literary Remains of Edward FitzGerald - עמוד 482מאת Edward FitzGerald - 1889תצוגה מלאה - מידע על ספר זה
| Edward FitzGerald - 1889 - 626 דפים
...by Memory, he conceives The Deity to have projected Creation as a Mirror F- 31 482 BIRD-PARLIAMENT. To see Myself in, and each part of Me That sees himself,...fails underfoot: But this to tell— Their Road is thine—Follow—and Fare thee well. in which to behold Himself. And he adds a pretty, but, as usual,... | |
| 1897 - 1170 דפים
...Mysetj 'at my own Door : Who in your fraction of Myself behold Myself within the Mirror Myself hold To see Myself in, and each part of Me That sees himself,...Darkness wide Return, and back into your Sun subside. (Fitzgerald's Bird-ParKament, from Farid-uddin Attar's Mantik uttair.) In the search for truth there... | |
| 1897 - 654 דפים
...Myself hold To see Myself in, and each part of Me That sees himself, though drown'd, shall ever sec. Come, you lost Atoms, to your Centre draw, And be...Darkness wide Return, and back into your Sun subside. (Fitzgerald's Bird-ParKament, from Farid uddfn Attar's Mantik uttair.) In the search for truth there... | |
| Edward FitzGerald - 1902 - 314 דפים
...looking, Yusuf mill see the most beautiful Object in the Universe. Myself within the Mirror Myself hold To see Myself in, and each part of Me That sees himself,...Their Road is thine — Follow — and Fare thee well. EXTRACTS FROM FITZGERALD'S LETTERS RELATING TO "SUFFOLK SEA PHRASES." To Thomas Woolner. Lowestoft,... | |
| Arthur John Arberry - 2002 - 146 דפים
...but Myself & my own Door: Who in your Fraction of Myself behold Myself within the Mirror Myself hold To see Myself in, and each part of Me That sees himself,...Darkness wide Return, and back into your Sun subside. Nizaml, of the same brilliant period of Persian poetry, who is otherwise famous as the supreme exponent... | |
| Henry Bayman - 2003 - 436 דפים
...Track: I was the little Briar that pull'd you back. . . Come, you lost atoms, to your Centre draw And\ye the Eternal Mirror that you saw; Rays that have wander'd...darkness wide Return, and back into your Sun subside. Now the search of the birds for the Simurgh is none other than the human search for God, or Absolute... | |
| Joel Kupperman - 2007 - 210 דפים
...within the Mirror Myself hold To see Myself in, and each part of Me That sees himself, though drown 'd, shall ever see. Come you lost Atoms to your Centre...Darkness wide Return, and back into your Sun subside. (In AJ Arberry, Sufism, p. 109) Drawing closer to the God that (in this view) you are part of is not... | |
| |