Verse 101833aardekh kar


G3

1
how suspicious she is of me! --that in my mirror
2
having seen verdigris, she considers it [to be] the reflection of a parrot

is an archaic form of ( GRAMMAR )

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 63
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 380
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

This is another of Ghalib's many 'mirror' verses. But only a couple of these are concerned with the verdigris on the mirror; for more on this see 47,1 . For other parrot-and-mirror verses, see 29,2 . The obscurity of the present verse can be seen in the trouble it has given to the commentators. The parrot loves the mirror. The verdigris on the metal mirror is greenish like a parrot. Nazm thinks this means that the parrot too loves the beloved. Josh thinks this means the beloved suspects the lover of loving a parrot. Hasrat thinks this means the mirror is the lover's desolate heart. All of them except Hasrat thinks it means that the beloved is jealous of the lover's looking in a mirror. Both Nazm and Arshi suggest comparison with 202,5 , in which the lover wishes he were not so fond of the song of the garden birds, because the beloved is so suspicious []. That does seem to point in a plausible direction: whatever the beloved is suspicious about in the present verse, it does seem to be something extravagant and absurd. If we also adopt Hasrat's suggestion that the 'mirror' is the lover's heart (on the heart as mirror see 128,1 ), then we've perhaps done the best we can. But still, the connection with the (metal) mirror, the verdigris, and the parrot seems weak and forced. This is what Josh is complaining about. Of course, it's what the lover is complaining about too-- how far-fetched and improbable are the alleged grounds for the beloved's jealousy. But still, that's somewhat like saying a dull story is really a cleverly contrived story about dullness; it's special pleading, and a poet like Ghalib needs no such help. He can compose a clumsy verse once in a while, and we can recognize it as such. There also could be some missing source of 'connection' that we don't (any longer?) know. Perhaps some secondary or tertiary meaning of , , ? Ghalib is the kind of poet whom you can never be sure you are finished interpreting. On as 'to consider', see 90,3 . Note for grammar fans: The use of masculine singular verbs and omission of the subjects means that the verse could also be read as vocative (addressed to an intimate ). graphics/parrot.jpg