Verse 41821aarnahii;N hai


G17

1
about us, the suspicion of grief/offense of temperament is futile/absurd
2
in the dust of lovers, there is no vexation/grief/'dust'

'Trifling, frivolous; vain, idle, absurd, nugatory, profitless, bootless'.
'Grief, &c. (= ); indignation, offence; unpleasantness, coolness'.
'Dust, earth; ashes'.
'Dust; clouds of dust; a dust-storm;... impurity, foulness; (met.) vexation, soreness, ill-feeling, rancour, spite; affliction, grief; perplexity'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 145
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 348-49
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 207
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

All this subtlety is very well, but surely the chief relish of the verse lies in the mental jolt we get from the second line: 'in lovers' dust, there is no dust'. That's definitely the first reading, both in the dictionary sense and in one's colloquial experience of the words. Compared to the immediacy of this meaning, everything else is secondary and has to be worked out afterwards. First we are struck by such a seeming paradox , then we work it out and find ways to undo the paradoxical effect. But without the initial punch, the verse would have much less energy. Even after all the appropriate wordplay and secondary meanings have been figured out, it's still fun to reread that second line and re-experience something of the original jolt. (For another example of 'dust' versus 'vexation' wordplay with , see 27,10x .) By no coincidence, the first line works elegantly with all the meanings of . If means 'dust', then suspicions about the lovers are futile because the lovers don't exist any more; if means 'grief' or 'vexation', those are both very proper words to use in rejecting any 'suspicion' that someone might be cherishing a grudge or feeling a lingering 'offense'. The grammar of the second line, in its flat absoluteness, also suggests that not only is there contingently (by happenstance or personal choice) no sense of grievance, but there's no possibility of one either: in lovers' dust there simply 'is' no such thing. graphics/dust.jpg