Verse 91821ardar-o-diivaar


G9

In this meter the next-to-last long syllable may be replaced by two shorts.


1
don't ask about the self-lessness of the pleasure/luxury of the coming of the flood!
2
for/since they dance, fallen, end to end-- doors and walls

''Life; animal life'; a life of pleasure and enjoyment, pleasure, delight, luxury; gratification of the appetites, sensuality'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 58
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 330-31
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 101-102
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

In this ghazal, doors and walls have often been treated as agents. In 58,3 , they went out ahead to welcome the beloved; in 58,6 they fell at the lover's feet in fear of a flood of tears; in 58,7 they devoted themselves to the beloved's doors and walls; and now they dance in heedless rapture to welcome the flood. In every case, as is proper in the ghazal world, their behavior has been deduced from physical 'objective correlatives' (doors and walls casting shadows, collapsing in floods, bobbing up and down in flood waters). In 58,6 and the present verse, the doors and walls react to a destructive flood (of tears) in (at least on one level) opposite ways. Such ambivalence is not surprising; we see it even more clearly in 15,10 , which also presents a variety of reactions to , the 'coming of the flood'. For the doors and walls, the coming of the flood is the approach of dissolution and death. In the present verse we see the doors and walls bobbing up and down in the roiling flood waters, dancing with the 'self-less'-- i.e., 'devoid of self', hyphenated to differentiate it from the English 'selfless' meaning 'unselfish'-- ecstasy of the mystical lover about to escape from this transitory world into the realm of the eternal. And of course, these emotions may be ascribed only by the (crazed) lover who watches them, so that the emotions are really his own. The wordplay with -- 'totally, from end to end', but literally meaning 'head to head'-- is also a pleasure, since dancers moving in unison often have their heads close together. The excellent rhythm and sound effects of also well evokes the feel of dancing-- or of bobbing up and down. (Are the doors and walls waving, or drowning? Both, of course.) graphics/fallen.jpg