跳到主要內容

Shams-ud-din Muhammad Hafiz (c. 1320-1389)

Hafez
Poet
Khwāja Shams-ud-Dīn Muḥammad Ḥāfeẓ-e Shīrāzī, known by his pen name Hafez, was a Persian poet who "lauded the joys of love and wine but also targeted religious hypocrisy." Wikipedia
Born1326, Shiraz, Iran
Major worksDivan-e-Hafez

Even After All this time The Sun never says to the Earth, "You owe me." Look What happens With a love like that, It lights the whole sky.
I wish I could show you when you are lonely or in darkness the astonishing light of your own being.
Fear is the cheapest room in the house. I would like to see you living in better conditions.


The 14th-Century Persian poet Hafiz’s work is not just very beautiful – it is useful too. Hafiz can teach us how to get the most out of our lives, writes Daniel Ladinsky.


Shams-ud-din Muhammad Hafiz (c. 1320-1389) is one of the most beloved poets of the Persians, and is considered by many – from different cultures – to be one of the seven literary wonders of the world. Ralph Waldo Emerson and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe both agreed. As Emerson said of Hafiz: "He fears nothing. He sees too far, he sees throughout; such is the only man I wish to see or be." And Emerson gave Hafiz that grand and famous compliment, "Hafiz is a poet for poets."
Hafiz has no peer – Goethe
Both Goethe and Emerson translated Hafiz. And after Geothe's deep study of him, simply – though remarkably – stated, "Hafiz has no peer."
Hafiz poems were also admired by such diverse notables as Nietzsche and Arthur Conan Doyle, whose wonderful character Sherlock Holmes quotes Hafiz. Garcia Lorca praised the Sufi poet. Johannes Brahms was so touched by his verse he used several in his compositions. And even Queen Victoria was said to have consulted Hafiz in times of need – which has been a custom in the Middle East for centuries.  The Fal-e Hafiz, is an ancient tradition in which a reader asks Hafiz for advice when facing a difficulty or at an important juncture in their life – treating his books as an oracle and opening them with a deep wish from their soul for guidance.  
Hafiz
A ceramic tile – probably painted many years after his death – shows a likeness of the poet Hafiz (Credit: De Agostini/Getty Images)
The range of Hafiz is indeed stunning and provocative at times:
I am a hole in a flute that the Christ's breathmoves through – listen to this music.
Then this, from another poem,
Look at the smile on the Earth's lips thismorning, she laid again with me last night!
I feel Hafiz is a rare master of  ‘the utility of light’ – or ‘the sun’. And ‘the utility of art’. His poetry bestows its benevolence and ability to comfort, enliven and enrich those in need. Art should be a lover; it should radiate and allow you to warm yourself if in any way cold. Art can quench inner thirst and hunger.  And in studying the lives – and working with the poetry – of Rumi, Michelangelo, St Francis, Kabir, Mira and Hafiz, and several of the other great poet-seers, East and West, I came to learn that there was a wonderful common denominator in their work. They helped me form a three-word definition of art, which I then felt was a true gauge for success of any of poems or writings I ever become involved with, including my own. As Emerson saw Hafiz as a genuine measure of himself in all of his interactions, I too try to keep Hafiz before me when dealing with another person – or animal, creature or even plant. As water is poured through a cloth to collect impurities, I try and pour myself through the poems of Hafiz, and my images of him. 
In the moment
Those three words that Hafiz exemplifies, that came to me in studying the lives and works of those greats I just mentioned are an important definition and goal of art, and a standard I hold myself to: engage and give  
Illustration from a 19th-Century Divan of Hafiz
An illustration from a 19th-Century collection of Hafiz’s poems shows the poet offering his work to a patron (Credit: Wikipedia)
Perhaps one of the greatest attributes and values of art is to capture and exploit another person's attention. For when beauty does that the witness, or audience, always benefits. As Hafiz says:
The mountain's face lifted me higher thanitself.
A song's wink aligned me with joy. And atune paradise hums I came to know.
The forest, letting me walk amongst its nakedlimbs, had me on my knees again in silenceshouting  yes, yes my holy friend, let yoursplendour devour me.
To be engaged by a true teacher like Hafiz is to have lasting ingredients put into your mind, that when cooked through contemplation help us lead a better lifeInherent in engaging someone's interest is to make them present. And with so many suffering the tyranny of some past event or anxieties about the future, what a gift being in the moment can be, especially then if a jewel can be slipped into your pocket by some magi'sbrush stroke, writings, sculpture, instrument, or ballet step. Hafiz helps us inherit a treasure that is already ours, decreed at birth; and he speaks directly about that in some of his poems – how to file your claim!
Wine-tasting of the sky
I have published around 700 Hafiz rendering-poems in six books. And the impetus behind every single line of Hafiz I ever wrote is to help light a candle in your heart, to assist our perennial need to have fun, laugh and dance, "to lift the corners of your mouth." The weight that can be on us in an hour or a day, Hafiz is there to lighten.  His love for us is time tested and keeps encouraging and can inspire. He helps us to forgive those we have yet to forgive. And honour those we have yet to honour. And his herculean strength, his enlightenment, will rub off on you so that you too wish (and discover yourself more able) never to harm another via sound or movement. Hafiz became incapable of an unkind act, it is said.
Hafiz longs to help the highest aspects in us lead all the other parts
In hundreds of ways Hafiz addresses what impedes us from living a more fulfilled life. With unique, charming metaphors that he seems able to rain from the ground up, he longs to help the highest aspects in us lead all the other parts to a place where we can breathe easier and kick back more and say: "Ahhhh, this world isn’t so bad, as a matter of fact – it is amazing!" 
Tomb of Hafiz in Shiraz, Iran
The tomb of the poet in the Iranian city of Shiraz is a popular tourist destination (Credit: Getty Images)
Hafiz says:               
If your knees have not buckled in ecstasy while standingwhen a veil parts.         
If a cherished tear of gratitude has not sung leaping fromyour eye.
If anything your palm does touch cannot help reveal the
Beloved.
My words are full of golden secrets that are not too hardto crack, and will remedy one hundred fears and ills.
So, so many of Hafiz’s poems are precisely about unfettering the senses and refining the will, so that we do more “wine-tasting of the sky”, and more tenderly holding – in thought or with arms – the things we most love and know as precious nourishment. He unsnares our “emerald wings”.
Tales of the master
Two stories of Hafiz come to mind that my own teacher told me, and here again, these show the great range of Hafiz, and to me his rather incredible ability to never bore. To constantly engage and give. And so creatively lead.
The first story goes:
Once a young woman came to Hafiz and said,"What is the sign of someone knowing God?"
And Hafiz became very quiet, and stood in silencefor nearly a minute... lovingly looking deep into theyoung woman's eye, then softly spoke,
"My dear, they have dropped the knife. The personwho knows God has dropped the cruel knife mostso often use upon their tender self  and others."
The second story echoes a sensuousness, that is so much a part of the human dynamic, and that Hafiz fully embraces, and often uses as a springboard to heaven – as the body and its desires can be. It goes:
A rather serious  maybe too serious  universitystudent from another country came to Hafiz topersonally ask for his permission to translate someof Hafiz's poems into a little book.
And he said to Hafiz, "What is the essentialquality in your poems that I need to incorporate inmy translations to make them abiding and authentic?"
And Hafiz smiled, and placed his arms on the man'sshoulders, then said, "Do you really want to know?"
And the young man said, "Of course."
"Well, well then," Hafiz began and continued,
"My poems lift the corners of the mouth  the soul'smouth, the heart's mouth. And can effect any openingthat can make love."
Like the wondrous life the sun and earth give in their miraculous utility, so can the artist sometimes share in that,and any human being who is full of buoyant passion – or willing to die for some great cause, or sublime ideals.
So can the mind that knows all forms are part of an ultimate Self, and treats everything with respect. And a sacred hand reaches out from Hafiz's profound compassion and wisdom. A gentle embrace is there from his perhaps omnipresent spirit. The mosaic of illumined consciousness in his poems lead us to a greater self-awareness, empowerment and freedom. His wild onslaught of playful genius is a gold mine. And a beautiful romance can begin with all who hold dearly his books.     
Daniel Ladinsky is a poet and interpreter of mystical poetry who has written several books about Hafiz. His latest book Darling I Love You: Poems from the Hearts of Our Glorious Mutts and All Our Animal Friends is published by Penguin.
If you would like to comment on this story or anything else you have seen on BBC Culture, head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.

留言

這個網誌中的熱門文章

The White House has declared a state of emergency after a cyber attack forced the shutdown of a vital U.S. pipeline.

  F.B.I. Identifies Group Behind Pipeline Hack The attack by DarkSide, a relatively new criminal group believed to have roots in Eastern Europe, exposed the vulnerability of key U.S. infrastructure. This is how the Colonial Pipeline became a vital artery for fuel. The White House has declared a state of emergency after a cyber attack forced the shutdown of a vital U.S. pipeline.  Experts said that  gasoline prices are unlikely to be affected  if the pipeline is back to normal in the next few days. But the incident — the worst cyberattack to date on critical U.S. infrastructure — should serve as a wakeup call to companies about the vulnerabilities they face,  says The Associated Press .  【網絡安全】美國最大汽油管道被黑客攻擊 美國最大汽油和柴油管道系統的Colonial Pipeline在受到網絡攻擊後將其系統下線,令美國東部沿海主要城市加油站的成品油供應面臨威脅。Colonial Pipeline已聘請協力廠商網絡安全公司來調查並聯繫執法部門和其他聯邦機構。黑客對關鍵基礎設施的威脅一直在增長,促使白宮制訂計劃來提高公用事業及其供應商的安全性。

4月26:Marcus Aurelius, Eugène Delacroix, Ludwig Wittgenstein, I. M. Pei, Guernica

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/April_26 Births 121  –  Marcus Aurelius , Roman emperor (d. 180) "When you wake up in the morning, tell yourself: The people I deal with today will be meddling, ungrateful, arrogant, dishonest, jealous, and surly. They are like this because they can't tell good from evil." --from MEDITATIONS by  Marcus Aurelius Google 機械翻譯: 早上醒來時,告訴自己:今天我所處理的人將會干擾,不情願,傲慢,不誠實,嫉妒和 猥褻 ,因為他們不能善惡。 - 由馬庫斯·奧雷柳斯(Medcus)提供 黑體字翻譯錯誤 British Museum The Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius was born  # onthisday  in AD 121. This ring contains a gold coin from his reign – an aureus from AD 167. Carrying an image of the emperor like this was believed to be a powerful good luck charm.  http://ow.ly/jBWP30b2Yid "Say to yourself first thing in the morning: today I shall meet people who are meddling, ungrateful, aggressive, treacherous, malicious, unsocial. All this has afflicted them through

Dec.1~4: 《一日一言》:Joseph Conrad, 植村正久;韓退之;Robert_Louis_Stevenson;Herbert_ReadRobert Louis Stevenson

“Quiet minds cannot be perplexed or frightened but go on in fortune or misfortune at their own private pace, like a clock during a thunderstorm. ”  ―from DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (1886) by  Robert Louis Stevenson Robert Louis Stevenson - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Louis_Stevenson Robert Louis  Balfour  Stevenson  (13 November 1850 – 3 December 1894) was a Scottish novelist, poet, essayist, and travel writer. His most famous works are Treasure Island, Kidnapped, Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, and A Child's Garden of Verses.  Stevenson  was a literary celebrity during his lifetime, and now ranks as the 26th most translated author in the world. His works have been admired by many other writers, including Jorge Luis Borges, Bertolt Brecht, Marcel ... Dec.1~4: 《一日一言》: Joseph Conrad - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Conrad Joseph Conrad  was a Polish-British writer regarded as one of the greatest noveli