Verse 4x1816ilhai


G2

1
it has become a forbidder of lover-cherishing, the coquetry/pride of self-regard
2
{leaving aside formality / 'to tell the truth'}, the mirror of judgment is a hinderer/hindrance

'Caressing, soothing; cherishing; — clemency; courtesy; kindness'.
'Blandishment, coquetry, playfulness, amorous playfulness, feigned disdain; dalliance, toying; fondling, coaxing, soothing or endearing expression; — pride, conceit, consequential airs, whims'.
'[for A. تمييز tamyīz, inf. n. ii of ميز 'to separate,' &c.] Discernment, judgment, discrimination, distinction, discretion, sense'.
'Intervening, interposing; preventing, hindering, restraining; — one who or a thing which interrupts, or prevents, preventer, hinderer; hindrance, obstacle, impediment'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 146
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 232-33
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 211-212
Asi, Abdul Bari 225-226
Gyan Chand 343-344
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 For more on Ghalib's unpublished verses, see the discussion in 4,8x . For discussion of , see 65,1 . Initially it registers as a petrified phrase, with a general 'to tell the truth' effect. But if the lover is alone with the beloved, and literally 'puts aside formality', then he finds the mirror to be an obstacle to sight, as Gyan Chand suggests, and also an obstacle to his 'informally' approaching her. If it's an actual physical mirror, then it can be an actual physical barrier: she's ensconced behind it, coquettishly or arrogantly absorbed in it, perhaps even deliberately using it as a barricade. Alternatively, the 'mirror of judgment' might be partly metaphor ical: it might impede the lover's hopes by causing the 'self-regarding' beloved to form an unduly-- or, even worse, duly-- high opinion of her own beauty and merits. Thus the mirror would offer her advice: it would, in effect, 'forbid' her to waste her beauty on the humble, commonplace lover who has nothing but devotion to offer, when she could and should do so much better. In short, the 'mirror of judgment' is a hybrid concept, designed to flip readily back and forth between a physical and a metaphorical mode. In this respect it's like the 'foot of stability' in 152,3 . Note for meter fans: To make the second line scan, it's necessary to read , rather than the normal . Ghalib seems to be using an esoteric Arabicized spelling (see the definition above). graphics/mirror.jpg