Bustan (book)

The Bustan (Persian: بوستان, also transliterated as Būstān and Bustān) is a book of poetry by the Persian poet Saadi, completed in 1257 CE and dedicated to the Salghurid Atabeg Sa'd I or Sa'd II.[2] Bustan is considered one of two major works of Saadi.

The first page of the Bustan.[1]

It was Saadi's first work, and its title means "the orchard". The book contains the fruits of Saadi's long experience and his judgements upon life, and is illustrated by a vast collection of anecdotes. It includes accounts of Saadi's travels and his analysis of human psychology. He often mentions his accounts with fervour and advice similar to Aesop's fables. The book has ten chapters regarding the issues of ethics and training; namely, justice, mercy, love, humility, contentment, devotions, education, gratitude, repentance, and praying. [3]

This book is one of the 100 greatest books of all time according to The Guardian.[4] It is composed in mathnawī style (rhyming couplets), and has been translated into English. The Bustan was translated into Dutch in 1688 by Daniel Havart.[5]

See also

References

  1. This manuscript may have been produced in India during the 17th century. The page provides a praise of God as an appropriate incipit to the text. The first two lines read: "In the name of the Lord, Life-Creating, / The Wise One, Speech-Creating with the Tongue, / The Lord, the Giver, the Hand-Seizing, / Merciful, Sin-Forgiving, Excuse-Accepting." This page is typical of the first page of Persian poetical texts, with an ornamental panel at the top (sarloh) and the main text decorated by cloud band motifs and decorative illumination between the text and in the gutter separating each verse of poetry.
  2. C.E. Bosworth, The New Islamic Dynasties, (Columbia University Press, 1996), 207.
  3. Mozaffari, N., Siyanat, F., Khubanian, M.,Khansar, A. (2018). The Effects of Kindness in Saadi's Bustan. Theory and Practice in Language Studies. Vol 8, No 9.
  4. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2002/may/08/books.booksnews
  5. Iranian Studies in the Netherlands, J. T. P. de Bruijn, Iranian Studies, Vol. 20, No. 2/4, Iranian Studies in Europe and Japan (1987), 169.
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