Читать книгу Leg over Leg - Ahmad Faris al-Shidyaq - Страница 2
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الساق على الساق
فى ما هو الفارياق
فارس الشدياق
المجلد الثالث
Leg over Leg
or
The Turtle in the Tree
concerning
The Fāriyāq
What Manner of Creature Might He Be
by
Fāris al-Shidyāq
Volume Three
Edited and translated by
Humphrey Davies
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS
New York and London
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS
New York and London
Table of Contents
Letter from the General Editor
Chapter 1: Firing Up a Furnace
Chapter 5: Travel, and the Correction of a Common Misconception
Chapter 6: A Banquet and Various Kinds of Hot Sauce
Chapter 7: That Stinging Sensation You Feel When You Get Hot Sauce up Your Nose
Chapter 8: Dreams and Their Interpretation
Chapter 11: Physicking the Foul of Breath
Chapter 12: A Voyage and a Conversation
Chapter 13: A Maqāmah to Make One Stand
Chapter 14: Raveningly Ravenously Famished
Chapter 15: The Journey from the Monastery
Chapter 17: An Incitement to Nudity
Chapter 20: A Metropolitan Theft
Notes
Glossary
About the NYU Abu Dhabi Institute
About this E-book
About the Editor-Translator
Library of Arabic Literature
Editorial Board
General Editor
Philip F. Kennedy, New York University
Executive Editors
James E. Montgomery, University of Cambridge
Shawkat M. Toorawa, Cornell University
Editors
Julia Bray, University of Oxford
Michael Cooperson, University of California, Los Angeles
Joseph E. Lowry, University of Pennsylvania
Tahera Qutbuddin, University of Chicago
Devin J. Stewart, Emory University
Managing Editor
Chip Rossetti
Volume Editor
Michael Cooperson
Letter from the General Editor
The Library of Arabic Literature is a new series offering Arabic editions and English translations of key works of classical and pre-modern Arabic literature, as well as anthologies and thematic readers. Books in the series are edited and translated by distinguished scholars of Arabic and Islamic studies, and are published in parallel-text format with Arabic and English on facing pages. The Library of Arabic Literature includes texts from the pre-Islamic era to the cusp of the modern period, and encompasses a wide range of genres, including poetry, poetics, fiction, religion, philosophy, law, science, history, and historiography.
Supported by a grant from the New York University Abu Dhabi Institute, and established in partnership with NYU Press, the Library of Arabic Literature produces authoritative Arabic editions and modern, lucid English translations, with the goal of introducing the Arabic literary heritage to scholars and students, as well as to a general audience of readers.
Philip F. Kennedy
General Editor, Library of Arabic Literature