Verse 4after 1847aahho


G3

1
there has sprung up within her veil, a single/particular/unique/excellent thread
2
I die, that-- 'may this not be somebody’s gaze!'

'To rise, swell, be inflated; to come out fully, be developed;... to run over, overflow; to be or become excited or inflamed;... to be puffed up, be conceited'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 123
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 399
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

The 'thread of the glance' [] is a common idiomatic expression; see 15,3 for an example of its use. Here, it is cleverly not quite present: we in the audience must assemble it for ourselves from its two parts divided among the two lines. In proper mushairah -verse style, the second element of it is withheld until the last possible moment, so that we can't really interpret the verse at all until we hear the whole of it. For one and a half out of two lines, we have no idea what is going on in the verse; then suddenly it comes together at the end, and the metaphor yields a delicious burst of flavor. We might also ask, how does he know what's going on inside her veil? In 97,9 , a mechanism is provided: he knows she's frowning inside her veil because a wrinkle appears on the surface. Here, we might assume that the thread is on the surface of the veil, and thus 'in' the veil only in the sense of being part of the fabric, not in the sense of being concealed by it. And how suitable are the various meanings of (see the definition above) to the various possible situations we're envisioning! It has the scope for a loose thread coming out of the fabric, and/or a desirous or arrogant glance. When combined with the multivalence of , the ambiguities further proliferate. Or we might say that he's imagining the whole thing-- that with the preternaturally keen eyes of a jealous lover he thinks he can see through her veil, and can even find a single thread/gaze lurking there. In which case we realize that the 'thread' of his own gaze has penetrated the veil. Could it be his own gaze that he (thinks he) sees? There's no end to the complexities that this simple little verse can generate. graphics/veil.jpg