Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2011
An indescribable charm surrounds the early poetry of the Arabs. Dwelling in the wonderful creations of their genius with these ancient poets, you live, as it were, a new life. Cities, gardens, villages, the trace of even fields, left far out of sight, you get away into the free atmosphere of the desert; and, the trammels and conventionalities of settled society cast aside, you roam with the poet over the varied domain of Nature in all its freshness, artlessness, and freedom.
page 74 note 1 ‘And they came to Elim, where were twelve wells of water, and three score and ten palm-trees; and they encamped there by the waters.’—Gen. xv. 27.
page 79 note 1 Tabari, , iii. 43.Google Scholar
page 90 note 1 From a remark at p. 358, vol. ii. of his Culturgeschichte, I gather that Herr von Kremer holds that our author trusts too much to his own convictions, so much so as to neglect the process of forming “an objective judgment”; and, in his opinion, these convictions have not infrequently led him into error.
page 91 note 1 Beiträge zttr Kentniss der Poesie der Alien Araber, von Theodor Nöldeke. Hannover, 1864.Google Scholar