•  
  •  
 

عنوان المقال عربي

الخوف والشك من الظلم والعبودية والسجن في شعر الفرزدق

اسم الباحث عربي

عبد المطلب محمود سلمان

Abstract

The month of the Umayyad poet Al-Farazdaq, Hammam bin Ghalib bin Sa’sa’a (11220 AH / 641-730 AD) from Darm and then from Tamim with his verses with his contemporary poet Jarir bin Atiyah bin Hudhayfah Al-Khatfi, which were popular and widespread throughout the years, and moved from Basra to other Islamic cities, then across the literary ages from the era / or stage of the Umayyad rule from the Islamic literary era to our present age, until the verses were almost alone with what they included of pride in his nearest people and his greater tribe, the most prominent purpose in the collection of his poetry that was transmitted to us by the ancient literary historians, which included dozens - if not hundreds of long and short poems and pieces of praise, love and lamentation, which are not mentioned except in this study or that, and in this historical presentation - literary or that, rather his long ones are about fear of the injustice of the governors and rulers and personal or public complaint about them Injustice, and description of the restrictions (iron shackles among them and moral restrictions imposed by On himself, prison, and his suffering, along with many of the short poems and passages in which the poet expressed these themes, almost disappeared - with rare exceptions - from the places of fame, popularity, and spread in the large number of studies that dealt with this poet’s poetry, throughout dozens of decades of years.

Keywords

Al-Farazdaq’s poetry, Fear, doubts

Share

COinS
 
 

To view the content in your browser, please download Adobe Reader or, alternately,
you may Download the file to your hard drive.

NOTE: The latest versions of Adobe Reader do not support viewing PDF files within Firefox on Mac OS and if you are using a modern (Intel) Mac, there is no official plugin for viewing PDF files within the browser window.