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13 pages 26 minutes read

Hafez

See How the Roses Burn!

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1300

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Symbols & Motifs

Roses

Western literature and religion borrow heavily from the rose symbolism that blossoms in Sufi literature and teachings. The practice of being a Sufi is often called following the “Path of the Rose.” In The Sufis, Shah argues that the Rosicrucians (or “Rose-Cross”), an occult society founded in the seventeenth century, took their name from a mistranslation of the Sufi Path of the Rose. Many scholars also argue that the Roman Catholic practice of praying the rosary was inspired by this aspect of Sufi philosophy.

Roses symbolize love and beauty in both Sufi and western literature. For the Sufis, roses symbolize both the appealing love of God and God’s perfect beauty. Rose symbolism in western literature includes the divine figure of the Virgin Mary, but also follows a more secular religion of love with the chivalric quest for romance replacing the quest for God. To understand the distinction, one might consider how a rose garden for Sufis is a place to find God, but in British literature, a garden is used to describe a woman’s features (e.g. the “roses” in a woman’s cheeks in Thomas Campion’s “There is a Garden in her Face”). IN Hafez’s poem, the burning of the roses symbolizes both the ardor caused by love and the “death” it inflicts on the lover.

Wine

Hafez is known as the Bard of Love and Wine, and wine is a common symbol in Sufi poetry. Like love, wine has both physical and spiritual dimensions. The intoxication caused by alcohol is analogous to an ecstatic religious experience. Scholars also argue that wine is used in Sufi poetry as a metaphor to explain spiritual teachings.

Fire

Hafez’s poem uses “fire” (Line 2)—fueled by wine and roses—as a device for destruction and rebirth. It is the mechanism by which the first-person plural “we” (Line 4) undergoes symbolic death. In other words, fire is desire, as Emerson emphasizes by rhyming the two words. In general terms, Sufi poetry uses fire to represent illumination and divine exaltation. Fire exists simultaneously as an element with esoteric connotations, a representation of physical desire, and a symbol of God.

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