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Al-Mutanabbi

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The desert knows me well, the night, the mounted men
The battle and the sword, the paper and the pen!

Al-Mutanabbi (915–965 CE) was an Arab poet of the Abbassid era. He is considered as one of the greatest poets of the Arabic language.

Quotes

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  • إذا رَأيْتَ نُيُوبَ اللّيْثِ بارِزَةً فَلا تَظُنّنّ أنّ اللّيْثَ يَبْتَسِمُ
    • Ah, when the lion bares his teeth, suspect his guile,
      Nor fancy that the lion shows to thee a smile!

      (Translation of R. A. Nicholson)[1]
    • When you see the fangs of lions exposed, do not suppose that the lion is smiling. (Translation of A.J. Arberry)[2]


  • الخَيْلُ وَاللّيْلُ وَالبَيْداءُ تَعرِفُني وَالسّيفُ وَالرّمحُ والقرْطاسُ وَالقَلَمُ
    • The desert knows me well, the night, the mounted men
      The battle and the sword, the paper and the pen!
      [3]


  • إِذَا أَنْتَ أَكْرَمْتَ الْكَرِيمَ مَلَكْتَهُ وَإِنْ أَنْتَ أَكْرَمْتَ اللَّئِيمَ تَمَرَّدَا
    • When you honour a noble man, you own him, but if you honour an ignoble man, he rebels.[4]


  • ما كُلُّ ما يَتَمَنّى المَرءُ يُدرِكُهُ تَجري الرِياحُ بِما لا تَشتَهي السُفُنُ
    • A man does not attain everything that he desires; the winds convey whither the ships do not list.[5]


  • أعَزُّ مَكانٍ في الدُّنَى سَرْجُ سابحٍ وَخَيرُ جَليسٍ في الزّمانٍ كِتابُ
    • A charger's saddle is an exalted throne
      The best companions are books alone.[6]


  • أنا الذي نظر الأعمى إلى أدبي وأسمعت كلماتي من به صمم
    • My deep poetic art the blind have eyes to see,
      My verses ring in ears as deaf as deaf can be.[7]
One does not attain everything he wishes for. Winds blow counter to what the ships desire.
  • Man’s resolutions are in measure with his will; his noble deeds in measure with his noble heart.
    • Ode on the Reconquest of Al-Hadath, translation of M. Al-Mallah[8]
  • Petty affairs appear grave in the eyes of the petty, while grave matters appear petty in the eyes of the great.
    • Ode on the Reconquest of Al-Hadath, translation of M. Al-Mallah[9]
  • Had these birds been created without claws, it would not have harmed them, for the blades and hilts of his swords [provide carrion] for them.
    • Ode on the Reconquest of Al-Hadath, translation of M. Al-Mallah[10]
  • All sorts of men carry weapons; but not all who have claws are lions.[11]
  • Those with intellect suffer in bliss with their intellect, and the ignorant live blissfully in misery.
  • To you belongs the praise for these pearls I pronounce; you are the giver, I the arranger.
    • From the poem "To Sayf Al-Dawla"
  • He asks from men all that he has in himself, though even lions would not claim to match that.

A Young Soul

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[2]

  • A young soul in my ageing body [...]
    Hard biter in a toothless mouth is she.
  • Without hardship everyone would prevail.
  • Glory in hardship, sloth in comfort lies.
  • Defiantly live, or in honour die, Midst slashing blades and banners flying high.
  • A charger's saddle is an exalted throne, the best companions are books alone.
  • Beautiful women, as experienced men know,
    Are but darkness wrapped in dazzling light aglow.
    A life of friv'lous youth and worried age,
    Its futile course to futile death will flow.

Quotes About Al-Mutanabbi

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See also

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Wikipedia
Wikipedia
Wikipedia has an article about:
  1. Poems Of Al-Mutanabbi. A Selection With Introductions, Translations, And Notes, 1967, A.J. Arberry
  2. Poems Of Al-Mutanabbi. A Selection With Introductions, Translations, And Notes, 1967, A.J. Arberry
  3. Translation of R. A. Nicholson, as quoted in Poems Of Al-Mutanabbi. A Selection With Introductions, Translations, And Notes, 1967, A.J. Arberry
  4. Poems Of Al-Mutanabbi. A Selection With Introductions, Translations, And Notes, 1967, A.J. Arberry
  5. Poems Of Al-Mutanabbi. A Selection With Introductions, Translations, And Notes, 1967, A.J. Arberry
  6. Aphoristic Sentences in Selected Poems of Al-Mutanabbi (2015) Kamal Gatta Nasir
  7. Three Great Abbasid Poets: Abu Nuwas, al-Mutanabbi & al-Ma'arri, Lives & Poems, Paul Smith
  8. Moss, Joyce. 2004. World Literature and Its Times. Volume 6 : Middle Eastern Literatures and Their Times
  9. Moss, Joyce. 2004. World Literature and Its Times. Volume 6 : Middle Eastern Literatures and Their Times
  10. Moss, Joyce. 2004. World Literature and Its Times. Volume 6 : Middle Eastern Literatures and Their Times
  11. The Composition of Mutanabbī's Panegyrics to Sayf al-Dawla, Andras Hamori