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AT THE FAIR
من ديوان The Wanderer للشاعر Gibran Khalil Gibran

"Andrew On Prostitutes" 
by Gibran Khalil Gibran 

AT THE FAIR

There came to the Fair a girl from the country-side, most comely. There was a lily and a
rose in her face. There was a sunset in her hair, and dawn smiled upon her lips. No
sooner did the lovely stranger appear in their sight than the young men sought her and
surrounded her. 

One would dance with her, and another would cut a cake in her honor. And they all
desired to kiss her cheek. For after all, was it not the Fair? But the girl was shocked and
started, and she thought ill of the young men. 

She rebuked them, and she even struck one or two of them in the face. Then she ran
away from them. And on her way home that evening she was saying in her heart, "I am
disgusted. How unmannerly and ill bred are these men. It is beyond all patience." 

A year passed during which that very comely girl thought much of Fairs and men. Then
she came again to the Fair with the lily and the rose in her face, the sunset in her hair
and the smile of dawn upon her lips. But now the young men, seeing her, turned from
her. And all the day long she was unsought and alone. 

And at eventide as she walked the road toward her home she cried in her heart, "I am
disgusted. How unmannerly and ill bred are these youths. It is beyond all patience."

شعر الفصحى
شعر العامية
شعر الأغنية
الشعر الجاهلي
الشعر الإسلامي
الشعر العباسي
الشعر الاندلسي
الشعر النبطي
شعراء الطفولة
المرآة الشاعرة
دمــــوع لبنــان
المونولوج والفكاهة
فن الدويتو
مواهب شعرية
علم العروض
قالوا فى الحب
 
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