Arabic Poetry: Trajectories of Modernity and Tradition

(Grace) #1
span the abyss
and stand on the porch
of a world to be.
(Ibid. 51)

The poem also plays on a positive religious subtext not only of promise and
faith, but also of the condition of exile. Strangers draw more love and sym-
pathy. As already mentioned, in Islam strangers are always beloved by God.
The Prophet was told to flee beyond immediate borders: “Was not the earth
of God spacious enough for you to fly for refuge” (Qur’mn, “Women,” 70).
Nevertheless, the matter is the same if one flees for the cause, “He that flies
his homeland for the cause of God shall find numerous places of refuge in the
land and great abundance” (Ibid. 71). On a metaphorical level, there is in this
verse a promise of life after death, too. As sojourn on earth is temporary, poets
identify with Sufis, as these follow the life of fugitives, always afraid of being
contaminated by petty concerns. ‘Azlz al-Sayyid Jmsim speaks of this life as a
mask for another. Now it is the smql(the cup-bearer) whose cup holds one’s
life on earth captive:


The world is a mask, you who blame,
life is a smql
you smqltake me out of your cup
and in time of forgetfulness, I will call on you to possess this moment
a shore searching for a fugitive
an eternal pavement
A night with nobody!
Sorrow!^59

The oscillation between obligations and needs, between party politics and
individual response, informs other positions and attitudes. Many writers have
passed or are passing through this experience. Some have already made up
their minds to suffer isolation and ostracization. In the words of Adam Schaff:


Is there anything strange in the fact that those who formerly submitted
blindly to all orders because they believed in their correctness
should, in the face of revealed abuses, now raise questions about the
individual’s responsibility for his actions and the conflict between
conscience and discipline? Is it surprising that such people should
raise questions about the role of the individual in the mass move-
ment, and about how he is to decide for himself in the case of
conflicts between what he is called upon to do and his own standards
of right and wrong?^60

Even a poet of SacdlYnsuf’s caliber may pass through this bewilderment,
as do many other writers who develop a sense of guilt for not measuring up


ENVISIONING EXILE
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