Page:The Luzumiyat of Abu'l-Ala.djvu/106

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

that he anticipated Darwin's theory of evolution. And it is remarkable how the fancy of the poet sometimes coincides with the logical conclusions of the scientist.

XLIX

"Iblis," the devil.

L

"Rabbi," my lord God.

LVI

This quatrain is quoted by many of the Biographers of Abu'l-Ala to prove that he is a materialist. Which argument is easily refuted, however, with others quatrains taken at random from the Luzumiyat.

LVII, LVIII and LIX

Omar was also a confessed cynical-hypocrite. Thus runs the first line of the 114th quatrain of Heron-Allen's:

 
"The world being fleeting I practise naught but
artifice."

And he also chafes in the chains of his sins. Following is the 23d quatrain of the same translation:

 
"Khayyam, why mourn for thy sins?
From grieving thus what advantage more or less
dost thou gain?
Mercy was never for him who sins not,
Mercy is granted for sins; why then grieve?"

Abu'l-Ala, in a quatrain which I did not translate,

goes even farther in his questioning perplexity.

97