Verse 7x1816aarhai


G1

1
{although / to such an extent} through desolation, unbelief and belief/faith became topsy-turvy
2
the dust of the desert of the Ka'bah is as far as the street/lane of the sacred-thread

'Desolation, depopulation, destruction, ruin, dilapidation; desert place'.
'Topsy-turvy, higgledy-piggledy, turned upside down, overturned, ruined'.
'Forbidden; sacred; — s.m. The sacred territory of Mecca; the temple of Mecca, or the court of the temple; a sanctuary'.
'To, until, as far as; as long as, whilst; even to'.
'A narrow street, a lane, a narrow passage, an alley'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 159
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 240-41
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 233-234
Asi, Abdul Bari 237-238
Gyan Chand 364-366
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 For more on Ghalib's unpublished verses, see the discussion in 4,8x . On the , see 60,8 . The verse takes clever advantage of with its possible meanings of either 'although' or 'to such an extent' (on these see 1,5 ). By no coincidence, they both work intriguingly with the second line. If we take to mean 'although', then despite the fact that unbelief and belief have been inverted or overturned somehow, they still remain in touch with each other. And if we take to mean 'to such an extent', the effect is that unbelief and belief have been jumbled together so radically that their dust has mingled. What kind of would have created these effects? The commentators unanimously maintain that the cause is the expulsion of the idols from the Ka'bah. (On this see 231,6 .) Nothing in the verse requires us to think so, but it's surely the most piquant possibility. And it has the advantage of accounting for the direction of travel: sacred desert-dust reaches the precincts of idol-temples, rather than the other way around. Gyan Chand to the contrary, the long, narrow sacred thread as a long, narrow (and dusty) 'road' is perfectly plausible. In fact in 60,8 the same metaphor is used very explicitly. graphics/sacredthread.jpg