· So, we show up each month to do our part and then we all do our very best to remain mindful in our daily lives. This leads me back to Rumi and the three gates. I am becoming more and more aware of the negative effects of gossip—not only the gossip spoken about me, but more the “harmless” gossip that I may utter about another. Rumi, ‘We Are Three’ Further reading: Rumi: The Path of Love, by Manuela Dunn Mascetti (Editor) Camille Kabir Helminski, (4 November, ) Element Books Ltd. · (The Reed Flute’s Song by Jalaluddin Rumi, translated by Coleman Barks, The Essential Rumi) Editor’s Note: Although you can enjoy this poem on its own merit, I highly suggest you read this short biography of Rumi which offers a glimpse into his fascinating transformation from a regular religious scholar to one of the world’s greatest Estimated Reading Time: 1 min.
Rumi speaks to the human in all of us in one of his most beloved poems, "Only Breath". We are often so blinded by our differences that it's easy to forget that we are all the same. We may not share the same values and principles, but the core idea we collectively fight for is for the strength to protect our communities. Rumi: We Are Three. ISBN: Athens, GA: Maypop Books, First Edition Thus; Second Expanded Printing. Softcover. Inscribed signed by translator Coleman Barks to Thomas Rain Crowe, with hand-written Rumi quote. "Jalaluddin Rumi () is a Master of ecstatic groundedness. "Both worlds are here.". Rumi has given every word life; and everyone who reads him beholds the naked words of the soul clothed in living form. In Rumi we hear the pure voice of love—we hear the intimate whispers of lover and beloved, we feel the joyous heart gliding upon the water of its own melting.
Rumi: We Are Three. Pithy quatrains, ecstatic odes, and long rambles through the Mathnawi (including animal fables, jokes, and stories of human orneriness and innocence), all saturated with Rumi's deep teachings and images of his spiritual surrender. Pithy quatrains, ecstatic odes, and long rambles through the Mathnawi (including animal fables, jokes, and stories of human orneriness and innocence), all saturated with Rumi's deep teachings and images of his spiritual surrender. Three poems by the great Persian scholar and poet Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi () also known as Mawlana: versions of the originals, freely translated and reworked. THE UNSEEN POWER We are the flute, our music is all Thine; We are the mountains echoing only Thee; And movest to defeat or victory; Lions emblazoned high on flags unfurled-. Rumi expresses his appreciation: "Attar was the spirit, Sanai his eyes twain, And in time thereafter, Came we in their train" and mentions in another poem: "Attar has traversed the seven cities of Love, We are still at the turn of one street".
0コメント