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  2. Shirazi Turk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shirazi_Turk

    Shirazi Turk is a ghazal (love poem) by the 14th-century Persian poet, Hāfez of Shiraz. It has been described as "the most familiar of Hafez's poems in the English-speaking world". [ 1 ] It was the first poem of Hafez to appear in English , [ 2 ] when William Jones made his paraphrase "A Persian Song" in 1771, based on a Latin version supplied ...

  3. Alā yā ayyoha-s-sāqī - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alā_yā_ayyoha-s-sāqī

    The metre is known as hazaj and is the same as that of Shirazi Turk.Each bayt or verse is made of four sections of eight syllables each. In Elwell-Sutton's system, this metre is classified as 2.1.16, and it is used in 25 (4.7%) of Hafez's 530 poems.

  4. Persian metres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persian_metres

    That the poets of Turkey and India copied Persian metres, not Arabic ones, is clear from the fact that, just as with Persian verse, the most commonly used metres of Arabic poetry (the ṭawīl, kāmil, wāfir and basīṭ) are avoided, while those metres used most frequently in Persian lyric poetry are exactly those most frequent in Turkish and ...

  5. The Divān of Hafez - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Divān_of_Hafez

    The Divān of Hafez (Persian: دیوان حافظ) is a collection of poems written by the Iranian poet Hafez. Most of these poems are in Persian, but there are some macaronic language poems (in Persian and Arabic) and a completely Arabic ghazal. The most important part of this Divān is the ghazals.

  6. Sālhā del talab-ē jām-e Jam az mā mīkard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sālhā_del_talab-ē_jām-e...

    Sālhā del talab-ē jām-e Jam az mā mīkard is a ghazal by the 14th-century Persian poet Hāfez of Shiraz.It is no. 142 [1] (but in the Ganjoor website, no. 143) in The Divān of Hafez by Muhammad Qazvini and Qasem Ghani (1941), and 136 in the edition of Parviz Natel-Khanlari (1983, 2nd ed.).

  7. Sīne mālāmāl-e dard ast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sīne_mālāmāl-e_dard_ast

    In an article comparing this poem with the better-known Shirazi Turk ode, Iraj Bashiri (1979) argues that both poems describe the five stages in the path of Love, in Sufic tradition: loss of heart (foqdān-e del), regret (ta'assof), ecstasy (wajd), loss of patience (bīsabrī), and the ardour of love (sabābat or loss of consciousness ...

  8. Zolf-'āšofte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zolf-'āšofte

    There are articles on the following poems by Hafez on Wikipedia. The number in the edition by Muhammad Qazvini and Qasem Ghani (1941) is given: Alā yā ayyoha-s-sāqī – QG 1; Shirazi Turk – QG 3; Dūš dīdam ke malā'ek – QG 184; Naqdhā rā bovad āyā – QG 185; Goftā borūn šodī – QG 406; Mazra'-ē sabz-e falak – QG 407 ...

  9. Mazra'-ē sabz-e falak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mazra'-ē_sabz-e_falak

    The poem Mazra'-ē sabz-e falak ("the Green Farmland of the Sky") is a ghazal (love song) by the 14th-century Persian poet Hafez of Shiraz.It has been called "the second most debated ghazal of Hafiz, the first being the Shirazi Turk". [1]