Verse 111852aa;Nho ga))ii;N


G1

1 a
although I stopped them, more/others welled up one after another in the breast
1 b
I stopped them to such an extent-- and they welled up one after another in the breast!
2
my sighs became the stitching-up of the tearing of the collar

'Step by step; one after another, in succession, successively, consecutively; repeatedly, continuously, incessantly'.
'Stitching; back-stitch; sewing with long stitches, basting, tacking; sewing very thick and strong; quilting'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 114
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 426
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

In line one, as so often, the use of generates the two meanings of 'although' and 'to such an extent', both of which are relied upon by the commentators. The positioning of also conveniently means that it can be used to suggest 'more', or 'other[s]', or 'and'. The wordplay in this verse is a treat: 'sewing' [] and 'tearing' [] are bumped up right against each other; as Faruqi notes, sighs too are often poetically constructed as either sharp like needles, or connected like a thread. Above all, as Nazm points out, the punning on 'to sew'-- , suggested by or 'breast'-- is marvelous icing on the cake. As the commentators make clear, there's such a range of readings possible! Does the 'sewing-up of the rip in the collar' by the sighs constitute an actual sewing-up, or merely a warped parody of it that in fact worsens the situation? Does the lover seek out, or control, or desire this special form of 'sewing-up', or does he suffer under its onslaughts? Does this 'sewing-up' increase the lover's madness, or diminish it, or merely show its steady-state endlessness? However we view the implications of the process, it seems to be one that, in principle, can go on forever. In that sense the verse evokes 19,1 , in which the fingernails gouge out a wound, and are then forcibly trimmed; the wound heals, the fingernails grow back, and the whole cycle starts again. But the ambiguous 'sewing-up' makes this verse more complex. Do the speaker's sighs, and his suppression of them, really constitute any kind of 'repair' of his torn collar? It could also be that this process is the (so-called) 'stitching-up' of the the collar only in the sense that the collar won’t get any other stitching-up than this. Think of 17,9 , after all; and of another, more despairing verse about stitching things up, 113,1 . graphics/sewing.jpg