Turkish Literature; Comprising Fables, Belles-lettres, and Sacred Traditions. AnonymousЧитать онлайн книгу.
href="#ulink_7d53f5c0-ee01-55f9-a017-2810b32f2e5c">I
II The Praise of God, the Wonders of God, and His Marvellous Works
III An Address to God’s Munificence, Holiness and Purity
IV Hymn of Praise to the Lord of Lords, to the Glory of His Creatures, and to the Prophets
VII What Was the Occasion of This Poem and the Arrangement of the Narrative
IX The Beginning of the Fascinating Narrative and of the Heart-ravishing Fable
X Description of the Rose’s Beauty in Every Member
XI The Shah Provides a Teacher for His Daughter Rose
XII Morning and Evening in the Rose Garden
XIII The Attendants of the Pure Rose, and a Description of Her Noble Court Service
XV The East Wind Finds the Nightingale, and They Discuss the Beauty of the Rose
XVI The Witty East Wind Counsels the Wandering Nightingale
XVII How the Lamenting Nightingale Comes to the Garden of the Rose
XVIII How the Nightingale Entered the Rose Garden Through the Kindly Offices of the Cypress
XIX How the Wandering Nightingale Alone in the Night Abides With His Sighs and Weeping Till Morning
XX The Sleepless Nightingale is Tormented in the Dark Night, and Mourns Aloud
XXI The Nightingale in His Amorous Pain Anxiously Addresses the Radiant Moon
XXII The Lovesick Nightingale Accosts the Risen Morning in a Clear and Fitting Manner
XXIV The Nightingale, in His Distress, Turns From Sun and Moon and Addresses a Prayer to God
XXVI The Prudent Narcissus Remonstrates With the Garrulous Nightingale
XXVII The East Wind Meets the Wandering Nightingale and Brings Him Tidings From the Tender Rose
XXIX Description of the Morning and of the Colloquy of the Lovely Rose With Her Nobles and Chief Men
XXXV The Ruthless Thorn Gives Advice To the Soft-cheeked Rose
XXXVI The Hard-hearted Thorn Slanders the Lovesick Nightingale Before the Monarch of the Spring
XXXVIII King August Appears in the East and Devastates the Earth
XXXIX King August Sends the Hot Wind With Fire to the Rose Garden
XLII The Monarch Spring Flees Also From the Peak of the Mountain and Disappears, and the