Verse 5x1816aaho


G2

1
what [kind of] arrangements would he make for sight/insight, that martyr of the pain of awareness
2
to whom the dream of Zulaikha would be a 'nose-hair' of/to self-lessness?!

'Making, preparing, effecting; feigning'.
'Seeing, sight; discernment'.
'Information, knowledge, intelligence, acquaintance, cognizance; vigilance'.
'Hateful, disagreeable'. (Steingass p.1350)
'The brain; head, mind, intellect; spirit; fancy, desire; airs, conceit; pride, haughtiness, arrogance; intoxication; ... —the organ of smell'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 117
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 218-19
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 167-168
Asi, Abdul Bari 193-194
Gyan Chand 302-304
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

For background see S. R. Faruqi's choices . This verse is NOT one of his choices; I thought it was interesting and have added it myself. For more on Ghalib's unpublished verses, see the discussion in 4,8x . For extensive discussion of the 'dream of Zulaikha', see 194,5 . Who exactly is the martyr 'of' the pain of awareness? The powerful versatility of the means that it could be someone who already has awareness, and has suffered from it (Asi's reading); or it could be someone who would be ready to suffer in order to attain awareness (Zamin's reading). Moreover, the verse evokes no fewer than four states of consciousness: discernment or insight []; awareness or cognizance []; a mystically visionary dream state []; and self-lessness or self-transcendence []. This is almost an embarrassment of riches; it's like trying to juggle with too many (hopelessly abstract) balls at once. (Additionally, there's the terrific wordplay with as 'mind'; see 11,2 for discussion.) Roughly, Gyan Chand's common-sense reading would amount to something like 'Would he seek out insight-- the person who has suffered from the pain 'of' awareness, the person to whom even a mystically truthful, divinely-sent dream like Zulaikha's would be merely a bothersome disturbance to his self-lessness?' That question can be a genuine question-- or, thanks to the good offices of the 'kya effect', it can be a strongly affirmative exclamation ('How he would seek for insight!'), or an indignantly negative one ('As if he would seek for insight!'). And depending on how we frame the relationships among those four abstract states of consciousness, any of these readings could quite well be made to work. But the real reason that I chose to include this verse was because of the grotesquerie, the morbid fascination, of its including in its lofty and abstract meditation on states of consciousness-- a 'nose-hair'. Obviously, it's there for the wordplay of in its more common meaning of 'mind'. For more on 'nose-hair' verses, see 42,8x . It kind of brings the abstractions down to earth, doesn't it? graphics/zulaikhadream.jpg