Verse 3x1816araave


G13

1
the Ascetic -- since (his) madness is the 'prayer-beads of precision'-- oh Lord
2
may he come as a prisoner of a hundred 'circles outside the door'!

'Abstinent, religious, devout; — one who shuns the world and exercises himself in acts of devotion, a devotee, a monk, recluse, hermit; a zealot'.
'Ascertaining, verifying the truth (of); ascertainment, inquiry, investigation, trial, verification; exactness, precision; truth, fact, certainty; — adj. Carefully ascertained or verified, well-established; authentic, true, actual, real, indubitable, sure, certain'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 197
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 270-71
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 271-272
Gyan Chand 479-481
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 For more on Ghalib's unpublished verses, see the discussion in 4,8x .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 the phrase , see 54,1 . Gyan Chand has obviously worked on this obscurely intriguing verse with both scholarship and ingenuity. I salute him with real admiration and appreciation. But as he himself acknowledges, his reading obliges the Ascetic to assume the exotic (and uncharacteristic) role of a morals policeman []-- and a remarkably inefficient one at that, since rattling people's door-chains, and then inquiring, would hardly be an effective way to learn whether people made use of their prayer-beads or not. So let me push off instead along different lines of conjecture. I take the nature of the Ascetic's madness to be the 'prayer-beads of precision', in the sense that he's obsessed with perfect performance of acts of religious discipline. He's constantly running through his head, like mental prayer-beads, the number and details of his austerities, since their precise performance is to him what prayers are to ordinary believers. He turns his faith into a regimen of endurance training, as he contemplates the number and rigor of the religious austerities on which he prides himself. Thus in the second line the speaker calls down upon the Ascetic a suitable punishment: since he's obsessed with counting out the (round, linked) 'prayer-beads' of mere external observances, may be be confined by a hundred (round, linked) 'circles outside the door', in the form of links of the chain that keeps the door of insight closed against him. For the real Divine presence is only in the space within the heart. The outer disciplines on which the Ascetic prides himself are useless in opening the door to inner mystical awareness. For another (and more effective) verse about the uses of prayer-beads, see 204,7 . graphics/prayerbeads.jpg graphics/doorchain.jpg