Verse 10after 1816amhu))e


G3

1
Asad , in beggary we didn't abandon heart-attachment
2
when we became an asker, then we became a lover of the people of generosity

'Asking; —asker, interrogator, querist, questioner; applicant, suitor, petitioner; beggar'.
'Generosity, liberality; nobleness, excellence; goodness, kindness, benignity; beneficence; bounty; grace, favour, clemency, courtesy, graciousness'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 191
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 302-03
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 253-254
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

A nice wry tone for a closing-verse -- but at whom is the speaker's ironic, or amused, or sarcastic, or rueful reflection directed? =At himself, for his absurd insistence on maintaining the role of a lover under even the most inappropriate circumstances? =At himself, for so readily transferring his lover-ship on what seems to be a strictly financial basis? =At his former beloveds, since they were obviously not 'people of generosity'? (If they had been, he wouldn't have ended up as a beggar.) =At his new beloveds, the 'people of generosity' (and/or patrons), since they seem to be buying his loyalty? (Or perhaps they offer him as little as his old beloved did?) Needless to say, these possibilities aren't mutually exclusive. Quite the contrary, in fact. For a far more bitter-sounding reflection on the relation of beggar to giver-- or poet to patron-- see 110,8 . This verse also (somewhat invertedly) recalls Ghalib's many poetic exhortations against taking anything from others; on this see 9,1 . Is a beggar who's also a lover more honorable than an ordinary beggar, or more cynical? graphics/mandodari_byravivarma.jpg.jpg