:: year 14, Issue 55 (3-2007) ::
Persian Language and Literature 2007, 14(55): 5-18 Back to browse issues page
A Reflection on Khaghani Shervani's "Taq-e Kasra" Qasida
Sayyed Ahmad Parsa
Abstract:   (6300 Views)

The Lost and gone glory of the once magnificent Sasanid palace, Taq-e Kasra ,  has posed a grievous emotional impact on the many who have visited it for many years. Poets like Khayyam, Behtari, Khaghani, Sheikh Reza Talebani, and Ma'rouf Alrasafi, among others, have indicated their sad feelings of their visits to the ruined palace through their poems. From among all poetry on that theme, Khaghani's poem enjoys a higher prestige and reputation on such grounds as simplicity, and elegance in terms of both form and content. This article aims at scrutinizing the question whether Khaghani's poem, as assumed by a great number of contemporary researchers, was indeed written according to the motive of national patriotism on the side of the poet or rather stemmed from the poet's feeling of despair and fickleness regarding the unstable world. It is hoped that the findings of this study will shed more lights on the issue.

Keywords: Taq-e Kasra, Khaghani, fickleness of the world, nationalism
Full-Text [PDF 186 kb]   (1717 Downloads)    
Type of Study: Research |


XML   Persian Abstract   Print



Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
year 14, Issue 55 (3-2007) Back to browse issues page