Verse 6x1816aahai


G2

1
through/from the harshnesses of the prison of life, freedom-- 'known' [not to exist]!
2
even/also a spark is a prey of the net/snare of connection/thread of the veins of a rock

'Hardness, stiffness, rigidity, firmness; tightness; stinginess; obduracy, obstinacy; intenseness, intensity, vehemence, severity; harshness, asperity; sternness, austereness; violence, atrocity; cruelty; grievance, hardship; adversity, indigence, distress, difficulty, evil, calamity'.
'Thread, string, line; series; connexion, relationship, ... ; alliance, affinity'.
'A hard stone, a flint'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 181
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 277-79
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 234-241
Asi, Abdul Bari 238-240
Gyan Chand 367-371
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 For more on Ghalib's unpublished verses, see the discussion in 4,8x . For more on this colloquial use of , see 4,3 . Sparks are said to flow in the 'veins' of rocks the way blood flows in human veins-- after all, when you strike a human you get blood, and when you strike a rock you get a spark. This is the normal logic of the metaphor; for more on verses about sparks and rocks, see 20,6 . In this verse, however, the veins of a rock are presented as a ramifying network, reticulated like a net; thus they're suitably shaped to suggest the trapping of a hunter's prey, usually a bird or small animal, inside a net. The spark is trapped within this net of rock-veins, with its rough 'harshnesses', for as long as it lives; if it emerges into the outer world, it's only to die at once. With the same irrevocability, humans are trapped within the 'harshnesses' of the (social? biological?) network of life. They have no more chance of escaping than the spark does-- and then, only on the same terms. As Zamin notes, the dense wordplay itself forms a kind of network of affinities. As Asi notes, an excellent verse for comparison is 115,5 . graphics/rockveins.jpg