Table of Contents
- Middle Period: the rise of Persian and Turkish poetry
For Students
In all forms of poetry and in most types of prose, writers shared a common fund of imagery that was gradually refined and enlarged in the course of time. The main source of imagery was the Qurʾān, its figures and utterances often divested of their sacred significance. Thus, the beautiful Joseph (surah 12) is a fitting symbol for the handsome beloved; the nightingale may sing the psalms of David (surah 21:79 et al.); and the rose sits on Solomon’s wind-borne throne (surah 21:81 et al.), and its opening petals can be compared to Joseph’s shirt rent by Potiphar’s wife (surah ...(100 of 63390 words)