Verse 21854aanah hu))aa


G5

In this meter the first long syllable may be replaced by a short; and the next-to-last long syllable may be replaced by two shorts.


1
even/also in servitude we are so free and self-regarding that we
2
turned and came back if the door of the Ka'bah did not open

'Self-conceited, vain, proud, arrogant, presumptuous'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 48
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 448
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

Azad's anecdote above seemed so appropriate to the mood of this verse that I couldn't resist including it. This is a rather simple and straightforward verse. The key to its impact is the lover's self-contradictory status: he doesn't deny being in a state of servitude, in fact he emphasizes it-- , 'even in bondage' or 'in bondage too'. Yet he also emphasizes his being , 'free', and , literally 'self-regarding', to a degree that certainly makes him a very dubious 'servant'. If God doesn't meet him halfway and offer an opened door, he simply turns around and goes back; he's not one to beg and plead, or hang about humbly and try to slip in later. In short, the speaker announces that he has treated God somewhat the way Ghalib treated Mr. Thomason when he turned back from the famous Delhi College employment interview. The is here an emphatic colloquial expression, more like (* Grammar *). Baqir points out that the door of the Ka'bah is in fact never closed, and that the verse serves to remind us of this. For more verses that explicitly refer to the Ka'bah, consult the Names index. Baqir's point may be well-taken, and a pious reader might even come away with such an impression. But the grammar of the verse clearly emphasizes a change of state, 'did not become open' [], rather than a steady-state 'was not [in a state of being] open' []. In other words, the speaker seems to demand that the door should become open especially for him, just at the point when he arrives. Ghalib rarely endorses any kind of conventional piety; 161,4 brings it all down to a question of , of 'temperament'. Other verses about 'self-regardingness': 6,13x ; 12,4x ; 15,17x ; 208,6 . Compare Mir 's even more drastic solution to the same problem: M 1679,8 : [if at the door of the Ka'bah there's no opening, then go sit in a temple and become an infidel, put on a forehead-mark, read a holy-book, have a sacred-thread tied around your neck] graphics/kaabah.jpg