Verse 5x1816aazhai


G1

1
the scratching of the pen is outpourings of the welcoming of coquetry
2
the letter itself is, to the message, the wing and feather of flight

'Pouring out, scattering; flowing in small quantities, running'.
'Encountering, meeting; the ceremony of meeting and receiving a visitor; reception, welcome'.
'Blandishment, coquetry, playfulness, amorous playfulness, feigned disdain; dalliance, toying; fondling, coaxing, soothing or endearing expression; —pride, conceit, consequential airs, whims; —softness, delicacy; elegance, gracefulness'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 157
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 239-40
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 229-230
Asi, Abdul Bari 235
Gyan Chand 361-363,551
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 For more on Ghalib's unpublished verses, see the discussion in 4,8x . The 'welcoming of coquetry' could certainly refer, as Gyan Chand assumes, to the lover's eagerness to welcome the coming of the coquettish beloved. But thanks to the subtlety and flexibility of the , it could equally well refer to the welcome extended by coquetry-- that is, to the flirtatiousness of a beloved preparing a teasing or playful reception for the lover, as Asi assumes. Such a welcome could either consist of, or be illustrated by, the tendency of the lover's letter to equip itself with wings and feathers. For as a bird, endowed with the grace and beauty of flight, would the letter not be inclined to groom its feathers and preen itself? But then why, and how, does the letter become a bird, why does it become the wings and feathers of the message? It's mostly this metamorphosis that Zamin finds so annoying. As Gyan Chand points out, a leaf of paper has physical and aerodynamic properties like those of a wing; it can float airily and playfully in the breeze. A 'message' is inert, perhaps even unwritten, perhaps even unspoken-- but once it has acquired the wings and feathers of a letter, it can be on its way, graceful, capable, and independent (thus perhaps coquettish). And the lover's vivid imagination sees the letter-bird as traveling fast and free, so that it won't be necessary to employ a bothersome and unreliable Messenger . And such lovely sound effects! We have two sets of wings and feathers: and , and then and . There's also the rhyming of and (echoed also by ), and of and . Compare the preeminent 'scratching of the pen' verse, 169,13 . graphics/quillpen.jpg