The Diwan of Abu'l-Ala 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Diwan of Abu'l-Ala, by Henry 
Baerlein This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
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Title: The Diwan of Abu'l-Ala 
Author: Henry Baerlein 
Release Date: August 2, 2004 [EBook #13086] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: UTF-8 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
DIWAN OF ABU'L-ALA *** 
 
The Wisdom of the East Series 
Edited by L. CRANMER-BYNG Dr. S. A. KAPADIA 
 
THE DIWAN OF ABU'L-ALA 
By HENRY BAERLEIN 
Author of "In Pursuit of Dulcinea," "The Shade of the Balkans," 
"Yrivand," etc. 
The stars have sunk from the celestial bowers, And in the garden have 
been turned to flowers. MUTAMID, in captivity. 
Second Edition 
LONDON: John Murray, 1909.
DEDICATION 
TO DR. E. J. DILLON 
Now the book is finished, so far as I shall finish it. There is, my friend, 
but this one page to write. And, more than probably, this is the page of 
all the book that I shall never wish to blot. Increasing wisdom or, at any 
rate, experience will make me frown, I promise you, some time or other 
at a large proportion of the pages of this volume. But when I look upon 
your name I hear a troop of memories, and in their singing is my 
happiness. 
When you receive this book, presuming that the Russian Censor does 
not shield you from it, I have some idea what you will do. The string, 
of course, must not be cut, and you will seriously set about the 
disentangling of it. One hand assists by holding up, now near the nose 
now farther off, your glasses; the other hand pecks at the string. After, 
say, twenty minutes there will enter the admirable Miss Fox--oh! the 
tea she used to make for us when we were freezing on the mountains of 
Bulgaria, what time our Chicagoan millionaire was ruffled and 
Milyukov, the adventurous professor, standing now not far from 
Russia's helm, would always drive ahead of us and say, with princely 
gesture, that if we suffered from the dust it was advisable that he should 
be the one to meet the fury of the local lions. But do not let us lose the 
scent: Miss Fox, that woman of resource, will cut the string. And later 
on, while to her you are dictating things political and while your other 
secretary is discoursing music, mournful Russian music, then with 
many wrinkles on your brow you will hold the book at arm's length. 
"The Serbonian Bog," says Miss Fox, repeating the last lines of the 
dictation. 
Your face is held sideways with what is called, I believe, a quizzical 
expression. 
"Morocco," says she, "viewed from the banks of the Seine, is becoming 
more and more like the Serbonian Bog." Then she waits, discreet as 
always, while you think. Miss Fox, his thoughts are on the Adriatic! 
There his boat, eleven years ago, was sailing underneath a net of stars 
and he was talking to a fellow-traveller. They had been joined at first 
by common suffering,--and how shall mortals find a stronger link? On 
board that boat there was an elderly American, the widow of a senator's 
brother-in-law, whose mission was, she took it, to convert those two.
What specially attracted her to them was not, perhaps, that they 
excelled the other passengers in luridness, but that they had the 
privilege of understanding, more or less, her language. 
"Feci quod potui," said Dr. Dillon, "faciant meliora potentes." 
She said, and let us hope with truth, that recently a Chinaman, another 
object of her ministrations, had addressed her as "Your honour, the 
foreign devil." And this caused her to discuss the details of our final 
journey--in the meantime we have taken many others of a more 
delightful sort--and she assured us that we should be joined by 
Chinamen and all those Easterners. She had extremely little hope for 
any of them, and Abu'l-Ala, the Syrian poet, whom Dr. Dillon had been 
putting into English prose,-- Abu'l-Ala she steadily refused to read. Nor 
did the prospect of beholding him in English verse evoke a sign of joy 
upon her countenance. "Oh," she exclaimed, "what good is it?" And 
there is naught for me to say but "Feci quod potui, faciant meliora 
potentes." 
H. B. 
 
CONTENTS 
INTRODUCTION TO THE DIWAN 
THE DIWAN OF ABU'L-ALA 
APPENDIX 
 
EDITORIAL NOTE 
The object of the Editors of this series is a very definite one. They 
desire above all things that, in their humble way, these books shall be 
the ambassadors of good-will and understanding between East and 
West--the old    
    
		
	
	
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