Verse 61853aamke


G14

1
there's news of the King 's 'bath of recovery'
2
let's see-- when would the fortune/'days' of the bath-house 'turn' [for the better]?

'Bathing after recovery from sickness'. Platts p.771)

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 231
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 445
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

What would it mean for the fortune of the bath-house to 'turn around'? Perhaps simply that having the King come to bathe, especially on such an auspicious occasion as his recovery from an illness, would in itself constitute a great honor and pleasure for the bath-house. Or perhaps the auspiciousness of having the King come to bathe would result in other improvements in the bath-house's fortune: perhaps the King or other nobles would endow the bath-house with some kind of improvements in honor of the occasion. Or perhaps even the cosmos itself, the hand of fate and destiny itself, would mark the happy event by decreeing an upswing in the fortune of the bath-house. And if the fortune of even a lowly and inanimate bath-house is to be so improved by the King's 'bath of recovery', perhaps the King will take the hint and realize that the fortune of the poet who celebrates his recovery could also use a bit of enhancing. A Persian , in a painting from c.1556-65: graphics/hammam.jpg