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Labid
Arabian poet (died c.660) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Abū Aqīl Labīd ibn Rabīʿa ibn Mālik al-ʿĀmirī (Arabic: أبو عقيل لَبيد بن ربيعة بن مالك العامِري; c. 505[1] – c. 661) was an Arab poet from higher Nejd and a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.
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He belonged to the Bani Amir, a division of the tribe of the Hawazin. In his younger years he was an active warrior, and his verse is largely concerned with inter-tribal disputes. Later, he was sent by a sick uncle to get a remedy from Muhammad at Medina and on this occasion was much influenced by a part of the Quran's , shortest Surah, 'Al-Kawthar'. He accepted Islam soon after. One of his poems is contained in the Mu'allaqat.[2]
His muruwwa (virtue) is highlighted in the story that he vowed to feed people whenever the east wind began to blow, and to continue so doing until it stopped. Al-Walid 'Uqba, leader of the Kuffa, sent him one hundred camels to enable him to keep his vow.
In an elegy composed for Nu'mh Mundhii, Labid wrote:
- Every thing, but Allah, is vain
- And all happiness, unconditionally, will vanish
- When a man is on a night journey, he thinks that he has accomplished some deed
- But man spends his life in hopes
- ...
- If you do not trust your self, approve it
- Perhaps the past would unclose it to you
- When you do not find a father other than 'Adnan and Ma'ad,
- The judge (God) will punish you
- On the day when every body will be informed of his deeds
- When the record of his life is opened before Allah
Muhammad said of the first verse of the above eulogy: "The most true words said by a poet was the words of Labid" and "Verily, Everything except Allah is perishable and Umaiya bin As-Salt was about to be a Muslim (but he did not embrace Islam)."
[Ṣaḥīḥ Bukhāri, The Book of Manners, Ḥadīth No. 3841][3]
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