Ali Mahmoud Taha
‘Ali Maḥmūd Ṭāhā (Arabic: علي محمود طه) (1901–1949) was an Egyptian romantic poet.[1] He has been called several nicknames, such as: The Engineer and The Lost Sailor.[1] The Egyptian literary scholar, 'Abd al-Majid 'Abidin, published an Arabic study discussing 'Ali Mahmud Taha "al-Munhandis" (the Engineer Ali Mahmud Taha) and Iliya Abu Madi in 1967, describing them both as reformist poets (sha'irayn mujaddidayn).[2]
Nevertheless, Taha was not as immersed in romanticism as Ibrahim Nagi and Mohammad al-Hamshari.[1]
Furthermore, Taha's poets were politically-colored, but even provocative and patriotic, despite his death, which was before the 23rd-of-July Revolution.
Poems
- East and West
- Spirits and Ghosts
- Flower and Wine
- Passion Returned
- Nights of the Lost Sailor
- The Lost Sailor
- Birth of a Poet
- Palestine
References
- Ali Taha Archived 2009-04-15 at the Wayback Machine at Egyptian State Information Service
- 'Abidin, 'Abd al-Majid (1967). Bayna sha'irayn mujaddidayn: Iliya Abu Madi wa-Ali Mahmud Taha al-Muhandis. Beirut: Dar al-Thaqafah.
External links
- Ali Taha on Egyptian State Information Service
- Poems of Ali Taha (Arabic)
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