Verse 11x1821aabaa;Ndhte hai;N


G11

In this meter the first long syllable may be replaced by a short; and the next-to-last long syllable may be replaced by two shorts.


1
even/also in confinement/bondage, the captive is free
2
the eye of the chain/shackle we/they versify/'bind' as 'open'

'A shackle, fetter, bonds; bondage; confinement, imprisonment; control; restraint; restriction'.
'Bound, tied, made captive; —s.m. Prisoner, captive'.
'Imprisonment, captivity'.
'To be or become open; to open; to be freed or liberated; to be relieved of sorrow, to become cheerful'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 92
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 335
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 159
Asi, Abdul Bari 166-167
Gyan Chand 269-270
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

For background see S. R. Faruqi's choices . For more on Ghalib's unpublished verses, see the discussion in 4,8x . On the literary use of as 'to versify', see 108,1 . Here's another little verse with absolutely nothing going on in it except wordplay-- but then, in twelve words, what more does it need for an enjoyable effect? Bondage versus freedom, the captive as free, captivity as freedom, the poetic act of 'binding' or versifying, the chains as 'eyes' that are 'bound' or versified as 'open'-- the mind ricochets among these abstract oppositions. The central metaphor of the (round) chain-links or shackles as 'eyes' is what energizes the whole clever paradox . For only if 'eyes' are open and vigilant can they be effective. But if these chain-eyes are open, then by that very fact their effectiveness is gone. Moreover, the mad lover, the persona of the poet/speaker in the ghazal world, is the one who is invariably chained up. Yet, as an extra paradox, not only do the chains ineffectively 'bind' him-- but he much more effectively 'binds' the chains, by 'binding' them into a verse in whatever way he chooses. The implication is that if poets wished, they could 'bind' the chain-eyes as closed. Note for grammar fans: This verse seems to take to mean the same thing as (see the definitions above). Elsewhere (for example, in 1,5 ), Ghalib does follow the dictionary definition. graphics/shackles.jpg