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    The Little Book of Life's Wisdom


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      Do

      About the Author

      ugl

      Kahlil Gibran (1883–1931) was a

      as

      Timeless Wisdom to Feed the Spirit

      -K

      For the past eighty years, the beautiful

      words of the Lebanese-American poet

      Lebanese-American artist, poet, and writer

      lo

      Kahlil Gibran have graced everything from

      t

      and Nourish the Soul

      of the New York Pen League. A native of

      z

      greeting cards and wedding invitations to

      what is now Lebanon, he immigrated with

      inspirational wall hangings and corporate

      his family to the United States, where he

      motivational literature. By one account,

      studied art and began his literary career,

      Kahlil Gibran’s Little Book of Life

      Gibran is the third bestselling poet of all

      writing in both English and Arabic. In

      time, after Shakespeare and Lao Tzu.

      Th e Valu e of Ti m e

      the Arab world, Gibran is regarded as a

      In Kahlil Gibran’s Little Book of Life,

      literary and political rebel. He is chiefl y

      we discover the essential wisdom of what

      They deem me mad because

      known in the English-speaking world for

      it means to be alive. For Gibran, life is that

      I will not sell my days for gold.

      his 1923 book The Prophet, an early exam-

      energy that saturates all we see and feel—

      And I deem them mad because

      ple of inspirational fi ction that includes a

      they think my days have a price.

      as well as what we can only imagine. Here

      series of philosophical essays written in

      are over one hundred fables, aphorisms,

      poetic English prose.

      They spread before us their riches

      parables, stories, and poems in that vision-

      of gold and silver, of ivory and ebony,

      ary voice of comfort, love, and tolerance.

      About the Compiler

      and we spread before them

      Sections include Listening to Nature’s Life,

      Neil Douglas-Klotz (Saadi Shakur Chishti),

      our hearts and our spirits.

      Beauty and the Song of Life, Life’s Human

      PhD, is a world-renowned scholar in reli-

      gious studies, spirituality, and psychology.

      And yet they deem

      Kahlil Gibran’s Journey, and Life as a Journey.

      The words in this charming little book

      themselves the hosts

      Living in Edinburgh, Scotland, he directs

      are infused with wisdom and joy. It is

      and us the guests.

      the Edinburgh Institute for Advanced

      indeed an ideal book for every season of

      Learning and for many years was the

      one’s life.

      cochair of the Mysticism Group of the

      L i t t l e B o o k o f L i f e

      American Academy of Religion. He is also

      the cofounder of the International Network

      www.redwheelweiser.com

      for the Dances of Universal Peace.

      I S B N 978-1-57174-830-0

      U.S. $15.95

      5 1 5 9 5

      Neil Douglas- Klotz

      9 7 8 1 5 7 1 7 4 8 3 0 0

      Kahlil Gibran’s

      L IT T L E BOOK OF L IFE

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      Kahlil Gibran’s

      L IT T L E BOOK OF L IFE

      Neil Douglas-Klotz

      Douglas_Klotz_forthpages.indd 3

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      Copyright © 2018

      by Neil Douglas-Klotz

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be repro-

      duced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic

      or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any

      information storage and retrieval system, without permission in

      writing from Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC. Reviewers may quote brief

      passages.

      Cover design by Jim Warner

      Cover illustration: Bridgeman images © Rebecca Campbell,

      The Trumpeter

      Interior by Deborah Dutton

      Typeset in ITC Garamond Std and MrsEaves

      Hampton Roads Publishing Company, Inc.

      Charlottesville, VA 22906

      Distributed by Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC

      www.redwheelweiser.com

      Sign up for our newsletter and special offers by going to

      www.redwheelweiser.com/newsletter.

      ISBN: 978-1-57174-830-0

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Names: Gibran, Kahlil, 1883-1931 author. | Douglas-Klotz, Neil

      compiler author of introduction.

      Title: Kahlil Gibran's little book of life / Kahlil Gibran ; selected

      and introduced by Neil Douglas-Klotz.

      Other titles: Little book of life

      Description: Charlottesville, VA : Hampton Roads Publishing,

      2018. | Includes bibliographical references.

      Identifiers: LCCN 2017039961 | ISBN 9781571748300 (paperback)

      Subjects: | BISAC: RELIGION / Christian Life / Inspirational. |

      POETRY /

      Inspirational & Religious. | RELIGION / Islam / Sufi.

      Classification: LCC PS3513.I25 A6 2018 | DDC 811/.52--dc23

      LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017039961

      Printed in Canada

      MAR

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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      FOR ALL THE IMMIGRANTS WHO CONTRIBUTE TO

      NEW CULTURES AND CIVILIZATIONS

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      Contents

      Introduction xiii

      1. Listening to Nature’s Life 1

      The Law of Nature

      2

      Said a Blade of Grass

      4

      Three Dogs

      5

      Shadows

      7

      Song of the Rain

      8

      A Hyena and a Crocodile

      11

      Two Oysters

      12

      Trees Are Poems

      13

      The Red Earth

      14

      The Full Moon

      15

      The Supreme Ant

      16

      The Pomegranate

      18

      Solitude

      20

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      Living Water

      21

      Other Seas

      22

      The River

      23

      Contentment and Thrift

      25

      The Lotus-Heart

      26

      The Shadow

      29

      The Serpent and the Lark

      30

      Frogs: On the Nature of Disturbance

      33

      Song of the Flower

      36

      Spring in Lebanon

      38

      2. Beauty and the Song of Life 41

      Life’s Purpose


      42

      Singing

      43

      Secrets of the Beauty of Life

      45

      The Poet

      47

      Art and Life

      51

      Pleasure Is a Freedom Song

      53

      Singing

      54

      Before the Throne of Beauty

      55

      The Flute

      59

      Beauty

      61

      Soul of the Dancer

      64

      An Hour Devoted to Beauty and Love

      66

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      3. Life’s Human Journey 69

      Your Daily Life Is Your Temple

      70

      Burying Dead Selves

      72

      Giving Up a Kingdom

      73

      Possessions

      77

      Treasure

      78

      The Value of Time

      79

      With Senses Continually Made New

      80

      Work Is Love

      82

      Builders of Bridges

      84

      Renown

      86

      Life Is a Procession

      87

      Song of Humanity

      88

      Singing in the Silence

      91

      Modesty

      92

      Between

      93

      Ignorance

      94

      When You Meet a Friend

      95

      Strangers to Life

      96

      Life Is a Resolution

      97

      Longing

      98

      To American Immigrants from the

      Middle East (1926)

      99

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      4. Seasons of Life 103

      Changing with the Seasons

      104

      No Miracles Beyond the Seasons

      105

      Youth and Knowledge

      108

      Seasons

      109

      Autumn and Spring

      110

      Time

      111

      All Your Hours Are Wings

      112

      Be Dark

      113

      Day and Night

      114

      Shell-Life

      115

      Tides of Breath

      116

      Shoreless Without a Self

      117

      Finding Fault

      118

      Every Year I Had Waited for Spring . . .

      119

      5. Paradoxical Life 123

      Life Comes Walking

      124

      Talk

      125

      A Tale of Two Tales

      126

      Confession

      127

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      Yesterday and Today

      128

      Gifts of the Earth

      133

      Giving and Gaining

      134

      High and Low

      135

      Seeking

      136

      Freedom

      137

      Limits

      140

      Owl Eyes

      141

      Voices

      142

      Ocean and Foam

      143

      Blessing Darkness

      144

      Agreement

      146

      Jesus and Pan

      147

      6. The Life of the Soul 151

      Resurrection of Life

      152

      A Fragment

      153

      The Greater Sea

      154

      Truth Is Like the Stars

      157

      Have Mercy on Me, My Soul

      158

      Trust the Dreams

      162

      The Greater Self

      163

      Rising

      165

      Children of Space

      166

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      Leave Me, My Blamer

      167

      The Forerunner

      171

      Walk Facing the Sun

      173

      Soul’s Dewdrop

      174

      Roots Between

      175

      Self Is a Sea

      176

      The Longing of the Giant Self

      178

      Angels and Devils

      179

      Blessed Mountain

      180

      Song of the Soul

      181

      Sources of the Selections 184

      Selection Notes 185

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      Introduction

      For the past eighty years, the beautiful words of

      the Lebanese-American poet Kahlil Gibran have

      graced everything from greeting cards and wed-

      ding invitations to inspirational wall hangings

      and corporate motivational literature. By one

      account, Gibran is the third best-selling poet of

      all time, after Shakespeare and Lao-Tzu. Through

      short excerpts, largely extracted from his famous

      book The Prophet, most of us know him as a

      visionary voice of comfort, love, and tolerance.

      As wonderful as this is, there is much more

      to Kahlil Gibran.

      These new “little book” collections take a

      fresh look at Gibran’s words and wisdom taking

      into account the major influences on his life: his

      Middle Eastern culture, nature mysticism, and

      spirituality. One could easily argue that what the

      average reader of his time found exotic in Gibran

      is the way he clearly expressed a region that

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      most regarded as a conundrum. A hundred years

      later, understanding this conundrum has moved

      beyond being an exotic pastime to becoming a

      matter of survival.

      The book before you collects Gibran’s words

      on “life.” Future books in this series will collect

      Gibran’s writings on love and relationships, on

      secrets of the spiritual path, and on wisdom for

      everyday life.

      To English speakers, the word life remains

      abstract. Do we mean the life-span of a human

      being, the course of daily life, or the philosophi-

      cal premise of existence? Who or what has life?

      To a Middle Easterner, the word life has a very

      specific meaning. Whether in biblical Hebrew,

      the Aramaic of Jesus, or the literary Arabic in

      which Gibran wrote many of his early works, life

      means life energy and vitality. What is important

      is the way someone or something expresses

      this life, not the way he, she, or it appears. Life

      (hayy in Arabic) is related to the common word

      for breath in the Semitic languages—a breath of

      life that is found in all of nature and throughout

      the universe.

      K A H L I L G I B R A N ’ S L I T T L E B O O K O F L I F E

      xiv

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      The “unnameable Name” of God in the

      ancient Hebrew tradition is related to this word

      as is one of the “99 Beautiful Names” of God in

      the Islamic tradition. Whether earthly or heavenly

      life, temporal or eternal life, inner or outer life—

      to a Midd
    le Eastern poet and mystic like Gibran it

      is all one life energy saturating everything we can

      see and feel, as well as what we can only imagine.

      Because Gibran deliberately connects cat-

      egories that most of us see as opposites, some

      critics have accused him of exploiting the simple

      literary device of paradox to artificially confuse

      and bemuse his readers. But seeing light and

      dark, inner and outer, good and evil as comple-

      ments, not opposites, lies at the heart of Middle

      Eastern culture and philosophy. If there is only

      one life behind and within everything, then con-

      nections lie around every corner, so to speak.

      According to one of his biographers, Suheil

      Bushrui, Gibran was heavily influenced by the

      mysticism of the 12th-century Andalusian Sufi

      Moinuddin Ibn Arabi. In Ibn Arabi’s idea of the

      “unity of Being,” the divine reality suffuses all

      of existence, yet is greater than anything we can

      I N T R O D U C T I O N

      xv

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      experience or discover. Even more, Ibn Arabi

      implies that what we call life is a kind of

      experiment-in-process by which the Greater

      Reality (related to what Gibran calls the “Greater

      Soul”) progressively learns more about itself

      through the life journeys of every plant, animal,

      human being, star, and galaxy, as well as an

      unnameable number of unseen beings.

      Another major influence: Gibran was raised

      as a Maronite Christian, an Eastern church allied

      to the Roman Catholic, but which until the 18th

      century spoke and used in liturgy the Syriac lan-

      guage, related to Jesus’ native Aramaic. According

      to Dr. Walid Phares, the Secretary General of the

      World Maronite Union, “the historic identity

      of the Maronite people is Aramaic, Syriac, and

      Eastern. . . . Maronites, particularly the national

      community that lived in Mount Lebanon and its

      peripheries for thirteen centuries, have main-

      tained their historical identity despite attempts

      by regional powers, including Arab and Ottoman

      empires, to impose an alien identity.”

      This upbringing had two major effects

      on Gibran.

      K A H L I L G I B R A N ’ S L I T T L E B O O K O F L I F E

      xvi

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      First, the Aramaic-speaking churches histori-

      cally viewed Jesus, the prophet of Nazareth, as

      a human being, a small-s “son” of God, who

      uniquely fulfills his destiny and expresses the

      divine life in a way open to us all. In this sense,

      we can all become “children” of God, that is,

      of “Sacred Unity” (the literal translation of the

      Aramaic word for God, Alaha). Gibran’s book

      Jesus The Son of Man takes the same viewpoint.

      In a very modern way, it tells the prophet’s story

     

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