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Hafez received a classical religious education,
lectured on Qur`anic and other theological subjects ("Hafez"
designates one who has learned the Qur`an by heart),
and wrote commentaries on religious classics. As a court poet
he enjoyed the patronage of several rulers of Shiraz.
About 1368-69 Hafez fell out of favour
at the court and did not regain his position until 20 years
later, just before his death. In his poetry there are many echoes
of historical events as well as biographical descriptions and
details of life in Shiraz. One of the guiding
principles of his life was Sufism, the Islamic
mystical movement that demanded of its adherents complete devotion
to the pursuit of union with the ultimate reality.
`Hafez's principal verse form, one that
he brought to a perfection never achieved before or since, was
the
ghazel, a lyric poem of 6 to 15 couplets linked by unity of
subject and symbolism rather than by a logical sequence of ideas.
Traditionally the ghazel had dealt with love and wine, motifs
that, in their association with ecstasy and freedom from restraint,
lent themselves naturally to the expression of Sufi
ideas. Hafez's achievement was to give
these conventional subjects a freshness and subtlety that completely
relieves his poetry of tedious formalism. An important innovation
credited to Hafez was the use of the ghazel
instead of the qasida (ode) in panegyrics. Hafez
also reduced the panegyric element of his poems to a mere one
or two lines, leaving the remainder of the poem for his ideas.
The extraordinary popularity of Hafez's
poetry in all Persian-speaking lands stems from his simple and
often colloquial though musical language, free from artificial
virtuosity, and his unaffected use of homely images and proverbial
expressions. Above all, his poetry is characterized by love
of humanity, contempt for hypocrisy and mediocrity, and an ability
to universalize everyday experience and to relate it to the
mystic's unending search for union with God. His appeal in the
West is indicated by the numerous translations of his poems.
Hafez is most famous for his Divan;
Eng. prose trans., H. Wilberforce Clarke, Hafiz Shirazi.
The Divan (1891, reprinted 1971). There is also a translated
collection: A.J. Arberry, Fifty Poems of Hafiz (1947).
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