The Madman
د.م. 55,00 – د.م. 70,00
Profound and inspiring are the poems and artifacts of The Madman, laden with human beliefs, aspirations, and fallacies. Gibran’s Madman is a reflection of insight and contemplation, for he is the individual who has broken free from society and no longer needs to revolt against it, and has learned to stand at a distance from it without dismissing compassion and tolerance towards others. Gibran’s Madman is a redefinition of madness, for he simply knows the nature of things more than necessary, and he is more honest than necessary to turn a blind eye to the truth and hide his awareness behind a mask. And no doubt the world will label him with the stigma of madness, but in reality, he is the wise and sane one.
Description
“The Madman” (1918): is the first English book by Khalil Gibran, comprising thirty-five allegorical stories and prose poems. In “The Madman” are sharp, satirical stories of profound meaning that embody the bitterness of disappointment and the resentment of malice, ignorance, ossification, and Gibran made his hero a madman to make the saying: “A madman speaks and a sane person understands” come true. Or because the madman, as he claims, is the first step towards detachment, and he helps, as in his tradition and in the tradition of the Surrealist school, to perceive the secrets beyond the veil of the mind. The book deals with one subject, the problem of the self in its relationship with itself, with others, with the universe, and with God, and this subject is social and metaphysical. The book represents the walker upon himself and upon the traditions, values, and those who are free in them. The book is also a collection of proverbs that symbolize liberation, the rejection of traditions, and spiritual transcendence and longing for perfection, and that is in a simplified language that relies on effective drama, metaphors, and accurate and interesting analogies.
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