Verse 6x1816aahkaa


G3

1
those withdrawal-choosing from the gathering are sight-exhausted ones
2
the glass of wine is the blister on the foot of the gaze

'Retiring; removal; retirement, withdrawal (of oneself), secession; self-seclusion'.
'Choosing, selecting; electing; preferring; adopting (used as last member of compounds)'.
'Tired, fatigued; --remaining or loitering behind; --unfolded, open, exposed'.
'Seeing, sight, vision; show, spectacle'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 20
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 146-147
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 65-66
Asi, Abdul Bari 67-68
Gyan Chand 101-103
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

For background see S. R. Faruqi's choices . For more on Ghalib's unpublished verses, see the discussion in 4,8x . Those 'exhausted with sight' (and notice also in the definition above 'lagging' and 'exposed', the secondary meanings of ) are the ones who choose to withdraw from the gathering. Perhaps it's their own eye-'sight' that has simply become tired from over-use; or perhaps the gathering offers 'sights' that dazzle and stupefy the sensitive beholder with their radiance. (The sight of the beloved can even vaporize the lover entirely, as in 78,5 .) Gyan Chand, to my delight, specifically applies to the first line the principle that I call 'symmetry'; if the reading above is 'A is B', then he also notes the possibility of 'B is A'. In this latter case, he thinks that the sight-exhausted ones have been waiting interminably for the beloved, and finally withdraw not 'from' but 'to' the gathering (thanks to the flexibility of the ). But he also rightly suggests that this meaning is secondary. For in fact the image of the wine-glass as a blister seems best suited to convey the idea of fatigue incurred while drinking, not before drinking. The glass of wine is like a blister because both offer a round surface and contain liquid. If it's white wine, it could resemble the clear serum that forms inside some blisters; if it's red wine, it could resemble the liquid in a blood-blister. Is this gross? Yes! No doubt we're not actually invited to consider drinking from a blister, but still the verse easily meets my criteria for 'grotesquerie'. But the imagery of the verse also moves us very rapidly into sheer, unvisualizable abstraction: it equips the 'gaze' with a 'foot'. Surely this is even stranger than equipping the gaze's foot with a blister, because if a foot exists at all, it's easy to imagine that it might be blistered. But how are we to conceive of the 'foot' of a 'gaze'? There's no way to provide it with an 'objective correlative' in the real world. But then, this verse is the experimental (?) work of a poet aged eighteen or so-- and after all, he decided not to include it in his published divan . ../046/graphics/glasses.jpg