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The Four Valleys (Persian: چهار وادی Chahár Vádí) is a book written in Persian by Baháʼu'lláh, the founder of the Baháʼí Faith.The Seven Valleys (Persian: هفت وادی Haft-Vádí) was also written by Baháʼu'lláh, and the two books are usually published together under the title The Seven Valleys and the Four Valleys.
The Seven Valleys follows the structure of the Persian poem The Conference of the Birds. The Seven Valleys is usually published together with The Four Valleys (Persian: چهار وادی Chahár Vádí), which was also written by Baháʼu'lláh, under the title The Seven Valleys and the Four Valleys. The two books are distinctly different and ...
The Four Valleys; Gems of Divine Mysteries ... The work was lithographed in Bombay in 1882 and received wide circulation in Iran under the Persian title Risali-yi ...
The Four Valleys; Gems of Divine Mysteries; Gleanings; Kitáb-i-Aqdas; Kitáb-i-Íqán; Kitáb-i-Badíʻ; The Hidden Words; The Seven Valleys; Summons of the Lord of Hosts; Tabernacle of Unity; Tablets of Baháʼu'lláh; List of writings of Baháʼu'lláh; From the Báb; Persian Bayán; Arabic Bayán; Writings of the Báb; From ʻAbdu'l-Bahá ...
Chahár-Vádi (The Four Valleys), [16] addressed to the leader of the Kurdish Qádiri Sufis, Shaykh ‘Abdu’r-Rahmán Tábabáni of Kirkuk, a mystical treatise describing four paths to God, being the self, reason, love and the heart. Hurúfát-i-'Álín [17] [The Exalted Letters], reflections on death and the human soul.
A model of Persian prose, of a style at once original, chaste and vigorous, and remarkably lucid, both cogent in argument and matchless in its irresistible eloquence, this Book, setting forth in outline the Grand Redemptive Scheme of God, occupies a position unequalled by any work in the entire range of Baháʼí literature, except the Kitáb-i ...
The Súriy-i-Ra'ís (Persian: سورةى رئيس, Suriy-e Ra'is), or "Tablet of the Chief", which addresses Mehmed Emin Âli Pasha, the Ottoman Prime Minister, was written in August 1868, when Baháʼu'lláh and the other Baháʼís were being exiled from Adrianople to Gallipoli to their final destination of the prison city of Acre.
The Hidden Words (Kalimát-i-Maknúnih, Arabic: کلمات مكنونة, Persian: کلمات مکنونه) is a book written by Baháʼu'lláh, the founder of the Baháʼí Faith, around 1858. He composed it while walking along the banks of the Tigris river during his exile in Baghdad. The book is written partly in Arabic and partly in Persian.