A Critical Introduction to Modern Arabic Poetry
SHAUQI 29 sometimes turn into an irritating feeling of self-pity, on the whole neoclas- sical poetry, as is to be expected, is c ...
NEOCLASSICISM 30 people with whom he came into closer contact than he had done before in his life. No longer the mouthpiece of t ...
SHAUQI 31 Although he was more directly exposed to western influences than many poets of the romantic school were to be later on ...
NEOCLASSICISM 32 idiom and imagery of traditional Arabic poetry. For instance, in his poem entitled 'The Chief Events in the His ...
SHAUQI 33 (iv,63) and celebrate the nationalist struggle, as in his powerful poems: al-Hurriyya al-hamra' (Red Freedom) (n,235) ...
NEOCLASSICISM 34 imagery in Shauqi's verse 'helps to create a beautiful poetic atmosphere in which the old and the new, the past ...
SHAUQI 35 rid of it altogether. In the introduction to the first edition of his Shauqiyyat (1898) he wrote that 'poetry is too n ...
NEOCLASSICISM 36 tree (n,146,171) and her teeth like pearls (n,153). The situation is conven- tional, with the figure of the jea ...
SHAUQI 37 contemplating a moonlit sky.^37 Or, to take another example, his simple and charming poem Ukht Amina (Amina's sister) ...
NEOCLASSICISM 38 In the preface to his poem on Rome Shauqi writes that the main springs of poetry are two: history and nature (i ...
SHAUQI 39 When it is ablaze in the morning or when sunset envelops it in its flame And when the rays of the sun go round it on a ...
NEOCLASSICISM 40 With one exception, all the plays which he wrote towards the end of his career were historical. In the foreword ...
SHAUQI 41 phate and, especially later, he derived subjects for his poems from other Arab countries, taking the entire Arab world ...
NEOCLASSICISM 42 and deep seriousness, a class of school children and meditates upon their diverse individual futures, both piti ...
HAFIZ IBRAHIM 43 his lack of proficiency, he attempted a free translation of Hugo's LesMisfrables (1903). In 1911 he was appoint ...
NEOCLASSICISM 44 say that he nearly surpassed Arabic poets (i,33).^47 His conception of poetry revealed in the preface he wrote ...
HAFIZ IBRAHIM 45 plaints. Much of the effect he had upon his contemporaries — which accord- ing to enthusiastic reporters was at ...
NEOCLASSICISM 46 O you, who manage our affairs, have you forgotten our loyalty and affection? Reduce your armies, sleep soundly, ...
ZAHAWI 47 He also claimed to have translated into verse Macbeth's well-known speech on the air-drawn dagger, but the resultant t ...
NEOCLASSICISM 48 fields of education, publishing, journalism and law, and was successively member of the Baghdad Education Counc ...
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