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1 Pre | The better part of his life was spent in Shiraz, and
2 Pre | History of Persia", For the life of the poet, see V. Hammer;
3 Pre | Shiraz. Abu Ishac, whose life was one of perpetual dissipation,
4 Pre | few years later the grim life beat itself out against
5 Pre | at one moment Timur's own life was in danger. Mansur, who
6 Pre | completely to the contemplative life, but combined the functions
7 Pre | with a good equipment for life. Although he never submitted
8 Pre | his expectations. "Long life to thee and thy heart's
9 Pre | take a rosy view of his life. Daulat Shah, for instance,
10 Pre | renounced all the joys of life. His enemies went so far
11 Pre | essence, as knowledge or life; in the fourth the mystic
12 Pre | Whosoever chooseth the life to come, their desire shall
13 Pre | Though Hallaj paid with his life for venturing to give voice
14 Pre | leading a virtuous and pure life. Even the etymology of their
15 Pre | the conditions of Oriental life are such as to enforce rather
16 Pre | mysterious purpose of human life, and an unsatisfactory sign-post
17 Pre | of that melody of human life which is everywhere the
18 Pre | turns a thoughtful eye upon life and its conditions, Hafiz
19 Pre | illusion upon the road of life." But he handles Sufiism
20 Pre | heart has lived with the life love breathed into it; but
21 Pre | the edge of the river of life? But if the bowl had been
22 Pre | shall not pass away. His own life was spent in a ceaseless
23 Pre | his own time, and of the life of the individual in it,
24 I | attain the desire of thy life,~Cast the world aside, yea,
25 I(*) | supplied weary travellers upon life's road with the spiritual
26 II | the wine that flows~From Life's bejewelled goblet, ruby
27 III | heart's domain,~I send my life to bring thee peace again,~
28 III | bring thee peace again,~Dear life thy ransom! From thy singers
29 IV | mouth the fountain where Life's waters flow,~A dimpled
30 IV | And death lies near to life thy lovers know,~But know
31 IV | days~Lo, not for his own life thy servant prays;~Love'
32 V | dearer to youth than dear life itself~Are the warnings
33 VI | floweth past-so flows thy life away,~So sweetly, swiftly,
34 VIII | head~'Neath the archway of Life, to meet what . . . outside?~
35 VIII(*) | a terrible gift was that life which he had received from
36 VIII(*) | since the earliest day, life and sorrow have gone hand
37 IX | whose heart doth hold~The life love breathes-though my
38 X | and new!~Here round thy life the vine is twined;~Drink
39 XI | experience in vain.~Thy fettered life hangs on a single thread--~
40 XI | shalt not dread.~Waters of Life and Irem's Paradise--~What
41 XI(*) | fell upon him; the River of Life is one of the many streams
42 XII | XII~WHERE is my ruined life, and where the fame~Of noble
43 XIII | night's silence rang?~My life into his lay the minstrel
44 XIII | That shook the strings of Life's most secret lyre,~And
45 XIV(*) | baneful influence upon human life.~Stanza 4.--Rosenzweig says
46 XV | may enter in; return!~And Life shall pause at the deserted
47 XVI | That each must fill from Life's mighty flood;~Nought thy
48 XVI | nought!~The span of thy life is as five little days,~
49 XVII | Not thine on the page of life to enrol~The faults of others!
50 XVII | Faithful attain;~If such thy life, then fear not thy fate,~
51 XVIII | whose happy feet bathed in life's fount,~Help one who toils
52 XVIII(*)| discovered the fountain of life and drank of it, thereby
53 XXIII | friend--~Ah, what is left of life, now she is dead,~All wisdomless
54 XXIII | The nightingale his own life's blood doth shed,~When,
55 XXV(*) | instance, is dangerous to life, and one of the stars in
56 XXVI | rejoice in thee~Hangs of Life's single, slender, silken
57 XXIX | no more! for once again Life's Spring~Shall throne her
58 XXIX | Round the unstable house of Life doth roar,~Weep not, oh
59 XXX | the fount of Khizr giveth life for aye.~'Twixt Jafrabad
60 XXXI | preacher's homily~Is long, but life will soon be spent!~Ah,
61 XXXII | thou shalt reply.~To some, life brings but joy and endless
62 XXXIV | and a red cheek,~And his life ebb, sapped at its secret
63 XXXIV(*)| God breathed the breath of life into its nostrils, and ordered
64 XXXV | Zindeh Rud, and I forget~Life's misery.~Sorrow has made
65 XXXV(*) | name Zindeh Rud is River of Life. I tremble to think into
66 XXXVI | ask no more~How fares my life? to play the enemy~And ask
67 XXXVIII | there,~When from my body life and love have fled.~My soul
68 XXXVIII | make reply~To one whose life is straitened with desire?~
69 XL | may'st live and know thy life is sweet.~Let every one
70 XL | behind is sweet.~Hafiz, thy life has sped untouched by care,~
71 XLII | lingering?--~The waters of life are no longer clear,~The
72 XLIII | far than the mastery~Of life and the living, time and
73 XLIII | face~From the world and life shall bid him come forth
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