Bustanum (Hortus fructuum) est poema Saadi principale, praeceptasufica docens.Gulistanum[5] (Hortus florum, Terra florum, velRosarium, utGeorgius Gentius vertit), partim versibus, partimoratione soluta anno 1258 compositus, proverbia multa et narrationes continet. Praeter ea opera lyrica permulta reliquit.
↑Encyclopedia Iranica: "SAʿDI, Abu Moḥammad Mošarref-al-Din Moṣleḥ b. ʿAbd-Allāh b. Mošarref Širāzi, Persian poet and prose writer (b. Shiraz, ca. 1210; d. Shiraz, d. 1291 or 1292), widely recognized as one of the greatest masters of the classical literary tradition."
↑Encylopaedia Britannica: "Saʿdī, also spelled Saadi, byname of Musharrif al-Dīn ibn Muṣlih al-Dīn, (born c. 1213, Shīrāz, Iran—died Dec. 9, 1291, Shīrāz), Persian poet, one of the greatest figures in classical Persian literature."
↑Anglice: "Let us remember the words that were written by the poet Saadi, so many years ago: 'The children of Adam are limbs to each other, having been created of one essence.'"
Wikens, G, M.1985.The Bustan of Sheikh Moslehedin Saadi Shirarzi. In Anglicum conversus, cum textu primo. Iranian National Commission for Unesco, No. 46.
Yohannan, J. D.1977.Persian Poetry in England and America: A Two Hundred Year History. Novi Eboraci: Caravan Books.ISBN 978-0882060064.