The Gulistan, or, Rose garden of Saʻdi

Dublin Core

Title

The Gulistan, or, Rose garden of Saʻdi

Subject

Saʻdī

Description

Collection of lyrics full of moral reflections, containing sections on kings, dervishes, contentment, love, and social duties.

Is the Gulistan the most influential book in the Iranian world? In terms of prose, it is the model, which all writers of Persian seek to emulate. In terms of moral, philosophical or practical wisdom, it is endlessly quoted to either illustrate or prove a point. Sir John Malcolm even relates being told that it is the basis of the law of the Persians. It also traveled abroad. Voltaire, Goethe, Arnold, Longfellow, Emerson, Thoreau, Melville, and Franklin discovered, read, and took inspiration from the work. Moreover, travelers to Iran have often point out that to understand the mind of the inhabitants, one should read the Gulistan. The Gulistan is considered the essence of elegant but simple Persian prose. For 600 years, it was the first book placed in the learner s hand. In Persian-speaking countries today, quotations from the Gulistan appear in every conceivable type of literature and is the source of numerous everyday proverbial statements, much as Shakespeare is in English.

Contributor

Translated by Edward Rehatsek ; edited with a preface by W.G. Archer ; introduction by G.M. Wickens

Text Item Type Metadata

Original Format

Book

Files

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Tags

Citation

“The Gulistan, or, Rose garden of Saʻdi,” Humanities Hub, accessed December 21, 2024, https://humanitieshub.sdsu.edu/omeka/items/show/1234.