Hindustani Lyrics

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Item Code: NAV208
Author: Hazrat Inayat Khan
Publisher: Gaudiya Vedanta Brihad Mridanga Trust
Language: English
Edition: 1996
ISBN: 9788120814363
Pages: 65
Cover: PAPERBACK
Other Details 9.00 X 5.00 inch
Weight 70 gm
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Shipped to 153 countries
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Book Description
About The Book

"For the first time after some 80 years the collection of Sufi poetry the young Hazrat Inayat Khan (1882-1927) collected is becoming available again. It reflects his deep love for these outpourings of the heart and his affection for his peers on the path. The English rendering is typical of the outgoing Victorian age. But even today its devotional nature and blossoming de-scription seem to be apt to the rich flowering of the Urdu original. It is a happy occasion to meet with so many friends on the path, rarely happening in these modern times."

About The Author

Hazrat Sufi Inayat Khan (Baroda, 1882-Delhi 1927) was a fa-mous musician in his young years. Later he left for the West in order to spread the Sufi message of love, harmony, and beauty. He preached Sufism not as an orthodox sect, but as a forward-look ing world message of interreligious brotherhood. He founded many Sufi centres in the West, where the message is spreading now. At home, in India, the Sufi message has got an inspiring centre at the Dargah of the Master himself, located near the tomb of Hazrat Nizamuddin Aulia, New Delhi.

Foreword

OF the many languages of India, Urdu (Hindustani) is the most widely known, especially in Upper India. Both as a written and a spoken language it has a reputation throughout Asia for elegance and expressiveness. Until the time of Muhammad Shah, Indian poetry was written in Persian. But that monarch, who mounted the throne of Delhi in 1719, greatly desired to make Urdu the vogue, and under his patronage and approval, Hatim, one of his ministers, and Wali of the Deccan, wrote Diwans in Urdu. This patronage of poets was continued by his successors, and exists indeed to the present day; and the cultivation of Urdu poetry has always been encouraged at the many Courts of India. Some of the Indian Rulers are themselves poets, and find their duty and pleasure in rewarding with gifts and pensions the literary men whose works they admire. The Court of Hyderabad has for long had a circle of poets : the late Nizam was himself eminent as a writer of verse. The Maharaja-Gaekwar of Baroda is a generous patron of literary men, and the present Rulers of lesser States such as Patiala, Nabha, Tank, and Rampur, are deeply interested in the cultivation of poetry in their Dominions. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries many towns in India had extensive and flourishing literary coteries, and it is from the poets of that period that this handful of verses is gathered. The Mushaira—a poetical concourse, wherein rival poets meet to try their skill in a tournament of verse—is still an institution in India. Delhi, Agra, Lucknow, Lahore, Cawnpore, Allahabad, Benares, Calcutta, and Hyderabad, have all been, and some still are, nests of singing birds. Of the extent of Urdu literature some idea may be gained from the fact that a History of it written about 187o gives the names of some three thousand authors, and that Tazkiras or anthologies containing selections from many poets are very numerous. The poetry is very varied and of great interest. It includes moral verses and counsels, sometimes in inter-mingled verse and prose; heroic poems telling the old tales of the loves of Khusru and Shirin, of Yusuf and Zuleika, of Majnun and Leila, and the romances of chivalry ; elegies on the deaths of Hasan and Hussein, and of various monarchs ; devotional poems in praise of Muhammad and the Imams; eulogies of the reigning Ruler or other patron or protector of the poor ; satires upon men and institutions, sometimes upon Nature herself, specially upon such phenomena as heat, cold, inundations and pestilence ; descriptive verse relating to the seasons and the months, the flowers and the trees. Above all there is a great wealth of love poetry, both secular and mystic, where, in impassioned ghazals or odes, the union of man with God is celebrated under various allegories, as the bee and the lotus, the nightingale and the rose, the moth and the flame.

**Contents and Sample Pages**







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