Verse 6x1816arkii


G2

1
apart from madness, there would be no [other] result of self-adornment
2
if the mirror did not create a chain/shackle of polish-lines

'End, termination, completion, accomplishment, conclusion; result, upshot; accident; vexation'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 143
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 230-231
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 205-206
Asi, Abdul Bari 224-225
Gyan Chand 342-343,549
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 For more on Ghalib's unpublished verses, see the discussion in 4,8x .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 nature of , see 5,4 . Zamin is right to note the obvious 'objection' that chains or shackles don't prevent the occurrence of madness, they only restrain the madman. Yet he still considers the verse to be some kind of pleasantry or witticism, whether or not it has meaning, rather than condemning it outright as he so often does with problematical verses. That first line is the intriguing, thought-provoking part: might 'self-adornment' in fact drive one crazy? And I think I see a way to rescue the verse from the 'objection' to the second line. When someone looks into a mirror, it's really the gaze that strikes or touches the mirror. Perhaps it's the gaze that is trapped and chained or shackled by the mesh of tiny polish-lines, so that it cannot somehow fall into the mirror and create a self-reflexive madness in the self-adorner. Perhaps only the imperfection or impenetrability of the mirror rescues the self-adorner from a kind of solipsistic insanity. The self-adorner could obviously be the beloved (since she's the one obsessed with her own beauty), but it could also be the lover, since in the ghazal world there's so much mystical and philosophical use of mirror imagery (for the classical example, see 208,6 ). Metal mirrors like these were sometimes used in Japan for scrying : graphics/mirror.jpg