Verse 41851oaa))e


G13

1 a
it's obvious-- won't the Recording Angels become flustered/agitated and run away?
1 b
it's obvious that the Recording Angels won't become flustered/agitated and run away
2 a
perhaps from my mouth, indeed, might come the smell of last night's wine
2 b
but indeed-- from my mouth might come the smell of last night's wine

'To be confused, confounded, flurried, or flustered (by, or in consequence of, -se); to be perplexed, bewildered, or embarrassed (by); to be perturbed, disturbed in mind, agitated, disquieted, distracted; to be alarmed, scared, dismayed'.
'The two angels Nakir and Munkar.' (Steingass p.1423)
'Name of one of the two angels (the other being Munkar) believed by the Muslims to examine the dead in the tomb'.
'Of last night, last night's'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 216
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 413
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

How cleverly and amusingly Ghalib creates his effects! The first line offers us two very clear, very colloquial readings that are direct opposites of each other. He doesn't, in this verse, even deign to use any of the interrogatives like that are so conducive to such effects. If we take the first line as a short exclamation followed by a question (1a), the Recording Angels surely will flee; if we take it as one long single sentence (1b), they will definitely not flee. Then in the second line, the creative use of (along with the colloquially exclamatory 'indeed!' []) also generates two readinges. If we take as 'perhaps', the result is a kind of embarrassed, vaguely apologetic recognition (2a) that the speaker might have the smell of wine on his breath; if we take it as 'but' (2b), the information is presented with a flourish, so that it's connected in some strong logical or other way with the first line. It seems to me that in this classic 'A,B' verse, all of the four permutations work: =(1a) plus (2a): 'Oh how embarrassing, I must have made a social gaffe with my wine-breath and offended the Recording Angels-- naturally they've run off'. =(1a) plus (2b): 'I have a great plan for chasing away the Recording Angels! It's obvious that this will drive them off: I'll just arrange for my mouth to smell of wine.' =(1b) plus (2a):'The Recording Angels are tough and determined, nothing will discourage them-- not even if, indeed, my breath smells of wine.' =(1b) plus (2b): 'The Recording Angels are tough and determined, nothing will discourage them! But wait-- there's one last hope-- what if my mouth might smell of wine?' Among these alternatives, the second and fourth (which the commentators understandably prefer), have the additional enjoyable feature that the plan requires the speaker to drink wine every night as a precaution, so that in case he dies suddenly, he'll be prepared! graphics/angels.jpg