ABSTRACT
Khayyam has been the subject of speculation on the part of literary critics ever since Edward Fitzgerald published his own version of the Rubaiyat in 1859. This edition represented the first opportunity to study in English the work of Khayyam by a Persian scholar.
There is no conclusive evidence to prove which of the many quatrains attributed to Khayyam are authentic. Ali Dashti therefore constructs a likeness of the poet from references found in the works of writers of his day or immediately after, and from Khayyam’s own works on philosophy, mathematics and astronomy, of which the authenticity is not questioned. Khayyam emerges as a widely read and broad-minded scholar, immersed in his own studies, cautious and moderate, averse to committing himself on controversial questions. Using this portrait Dashti draws up a list of some hundred quatrains which are in keeping with Khayyam’s character.
Selling point: An elegant and accurate translation which throws light on the nature of Khayyam’s religious and philosophical beliefs.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |75 pages
In Search of Khayyam
chapter |9 pages
Khayyam as Poet
chapter |12 pages
Khayyam as Seen by his Contemporaries
chapter |7 pages
Meanness or Common Sense?
chapter |6 pages
Hero or Martyr?
chapter |3 pages
A Dispute with a Prince
chapter |16 pages
Khayyam from his Own Writings
chapter |13 pages
Khayyam and Sufism
chapter |7 pages
Khayyam and Isma'ilism
part |99 pages
In Search of the Quatrains
chapter |20 pages
The Key Quatrains
chapter |3 pages
The Axis of Life and Death
chapter |9 pages
Khayyam's Literary Style
chapter |14 pages
Khayyam and his Imitators
chapter |12 pages
Khayyam's Wine-Poetry
chapter |18 pages
Khayyam as Seen by the West
chapter |15 pages
The Selected Quatrains
chapter |6 pages
Some Khayyam-like Quatrains
part |43 pages
Random Thoughts