Remembrances / Mir Taqi Mir ; edited and translated by C.M. Naim.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Original language: Persian Series: Murty Classical Library of IndiaPublication details: London : Harvard University Press, 2019.ISBN:- 9780674988293
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
OPJGU Sonepat- Campus FOB Library | Special collection -Murty Classical Library of India | 891 MU- (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | Special Collection - Murthy Classical Library of India | 147017 |
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891 MU- Theft of a tree / | 891 MU- Ghazals : translations of classic Urdu poetry / | 891 MU- He spoke of love : selected poems from the Satsai / | 891 MU- Remembrances / | 891 MU- The story of Manu / | 891 MU- Selected ghazals and other poems / | 891 MU- Therigatha : poems of the first Buddhist women / |
"Mir Muhammad Taqi Mir (1723–1810) is the author of six collections of Urdu poetry and widely regarded as the finest ghazal poet in that language. However, he also wrote one volume of verse and three prose works in Persian, including Zikr-e Mir, or Remembrances, a rare and remarkable example of Indo-Persian autobiography.Remembrances recounts Mir’s ancestry, his father’s spiritual quest, and his own struggles to find education and patronage both in his native Agra and in Delhi. While the work may offer few glimpses into the author’s private life or professional literary activity, it presents a vivid picture of political events and intrigues between 1760 and 1789, when north India witnessed extensive warfare.The Persian text, presented here in the Naskh script, includes all the author’s additions and alterations properly identified and chronologically arranged, along with a newly revised English translation. Mir concludes his autobiography with a series of jokes and witty anecdotes, some of them quite risqué, that are printed here for the first time."--
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