Sahih Muslim 13019
SahihSahih Muslim
It is better for a man's belly to be stuffed with pus which corrodes it than to stuff (one's mind) with frivolous poetry. Abu Bakr has reported it with a slight variation of wording.
Part of: Manners, Etiquette & Character
11 hadith in this topic
Sahih Muslim
It is better for a man's belly to be stuffed with pus which corrodes it than to stuff (one's mind) with frivolous poetry. Abu Bakr has reported it with a slight variation of wording.
Sahih Muslim
It is better for the belly of any one of you to be stuffed with pus rather than to stuff (one's mind) with poetry.
Sahih Muslim
We were going with Allah's Messenger (ﷺ). As we reached the place (known as) `Arj there met (us) a poet who had been reciting poetry. Thereupon Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) said: Catch the satan or detain the satan, for filling the...
Sahih Muslim
He who played Nardashir (a game similar to backgammon) is like one who dyed his hand with the flesh and blood of swine.
Sahih Muslim
One day when I rode behind Allah's Messenger (ﷺ), he said (to me): Do you remember any poetry of Umayya b. Abu Salt. I said: Yes. He said: Then go on. I recited a couplet, and he said: Go on....
Sahih Muslim
"He (that is Umayya b. Abu Salt) was about to become a Muslim", and in the hadith transmitted on the authority of Ibn Mahdi (the words are) "He was almost a Muslim in his poetry."
Sahih Muslim
The truest word spoken by an Arab (pre-Islamic) in poetry is this verse of Labid: "Behold! apart from Allah everything is vain."
Sahih Muslim
The truest word uttered by a poet is this verse of Labid: "Behold! apart from Allah everything is vain," and Umayya b. Abu Salt was almost a Muslim.
Sahih Muslim
The truest verse recited by a poet is: "Behold! apart from Allah everything is vain," and Ibn Abu Salt was almost a Muslim.
Sahih Muslim
The truest couplet recited by a poet is: "Behold! apart from Allah everything is vain," and he made no addition to it.