A Book of Verse

A Book of Verse

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Here with a Loaf of Bread beneath the Bough, A Flask of Wine, a Book of Verse - and Thou Beside me singing in the Wilderness - And Wilderness were Paradise enow.' These four lines are among the most familiar poetry in the English language. They come from the collection known as The RubA!iyA!t of Omar Khayyam, a brilliant, controversial eleventh-century Persian mathematician and astronomer.How has his verse come to be so beloved in the west? A Book of Verse tells the engrossing and entertaining story of how a book of poetry has provided delight and fascination for centuries. It brings to life the evocative world of early Islamic Persia and the literary and artistic scene in England in the second half of the nineteenth century. From the sceptical and heretical author and the complex, irritating but endearing translator came a work that still expresses powerfully the urge to seize the day and live in the here and now, rather than some lost past or unattainable future. It has inspired artists such as Burne-Jones, Brangwyn, Dulac and Rickets and musicians such as Granville Bantock and Liza Lehmann and still provides an unmatchable source of access to 'Eastern Promise'.

Garry Garrard was one of the first people to realise the importance of the mobile telephone and became an international business expert on the subject, working as consultant to governments and businesses. His fascination with Omar Khayyam started as a form of relief from job pressures. He has a collection of over 200 editions of The Rubaiyat and is an expert on this work. He lives in Essex.

Author: Garry Garrard
Format: Hardback, 285 pages, 156mm x 234mm, 610 g
Published: 2007, The History Press Ltd, United Kingdom
Genre: Literary Criticism

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Description

Here with a Loaf of Bread beneath the Bough, A Flask of Wine, a Book of Verse - and Thou Beside me singing in the Wilderness - And Wilderness were Paradise enow.' These four lines are among the most familiar poetry in the English language. They come from the collection known as The RubA!iyA!t of Omar Khayyam, a brilliant, controversial eleventh-century Persian mathematician and astronomer.How has his verse come to be so beloved in the west? A Book of Verse tells the engrossing and entertaining story of how a book of poetry has provided delight and fascination for centuries. It brings to life the evocative world of early Islamic Persia and the literary and artistic scene in England in the second half of the nineteenth century. From the sceptical and heretical author and the complex, irritating but endearing translator came a work that still expresses powerfully the urge to seize the day and live in the here and now, rather than some lost past or unattainable future. It has inspired artists such as Burne-Jones, Brangwyn, Dulac and Rickets and musicians such as Granville Bantock and Liza Lehmann and still provides an unmatchable source of access to 'Eastern Promise'.

Garry Garrard was one of the first people to realise the importance of the mobile telephone and became an international business expert on the subject, working as consultant to governments and businesses. His fascination with Omar Khayyam started as a form of relief from job pressures. He has a collection of over 200 editions of The Rubaiyat and is an expert on this work. He lives in Essex.