74
The Arabic Language
development. In its most developed form, the strophic
muwaššaḥ
and the
zajal
,
it included the use of colloquial forms in a refrain. This kind of poetry became
especially popular in the Islamic West (cf. below, pp. 315f.).
Because of its idiosyncrasies, poetry is of lesser importance in the standardisa
-
tion of language than prose. We have seen above that for commercial and admin-
istrative purposes Arabic was used from the beginning of the Islamic empire.
Such written documents had no literary pretensions whatsoever, although their
scribes did try to maintain a Classical norm, which means that already at this time
there was a standard (on the language of the papyri, see below, Chapter 9). But
there were other forms of speech, some of them with roots in the
Jāhiliyya
. In the
first place, Arabic culture had a reputation of long standing for its ability to put
speech to rhetorical use. The Bedouin admired verbal prowess, and the tradition
of delivering public speeches was continued in early Islam. The earliest preserved
speeches already exhibit the use of various literary devices and conventions, in
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