1875 Hermann Bicknell Selections from Hafiz translated into English verse (120 Odes Williams and 1870 99 3. ... nople. Persian text, with (two) commentaries in Turkish, one by Constanti- : THE LIFE OF HAFIZ. REFERENCES. Nafaḥatu-l-Uns (1476) by Nuru-d-Din Abdu-r-Raḥmān-i-Jāmi (b. 1414, d. 1492). A mutilated MS. copy of Hafiz (1604), Asiatic Society, Bengal. Tarikh-i-Dakan by Muḥammad Ķāsim Firishta* (b. 1570, d. 1612?). Catalogue (p. 64), Library of Tippū Sulṭān, Maisūr, by Charles Stewart, Professor of Oriental Majma'u-l-Fuṣaḥā‡ (1872 by Mirzā Riza Ķuli Khān-i-Hidayat-i-Mazindarāni). Khwāja Shamsu-d-Din Muḥammad-i-Ḥāñiz was born in the beginning of the fourteenth century at Shiraz. He was of good family, of excellent education, and skilled in jurisprudence. Immersed in poetic indolence, public life and honours had no charm for him. In youth, he engaged in friendship and indulged in conviviality; but, afterwards, he devoted himself wholly to religion, observing austerity and embracing poverty. Proud of his genius, he never accepted invitations to Courts. Those who saw him little regarded him as a latitudinarian; those who saw him. much, as an enthusiast. He was an enemy to conventionalism; and acted on those broad and universal principles which, in every age and country, are the same. * The Firishta (Gulshān-i-Ibrāhimi, Nauras-Nāma; Tārikh-i-Ibrāhīmi) has been translated— (a) the 1st and the 2nd books (down to Akbar) by Colonel Dow, 1768. (c) entire work by General Briggs, 1829. Mohl says that Firishta was born 1550 and died 1623. † Mahdi Khān was confidential Secretary to Nadir Shāh (b. 1687, d. 1747). This work was translated into French by Sir W. Jones. This was printed by his son, the Director, Public Instruction, Persia, 1881. |