Verse 21821aaz


G9

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


1
do not be, over trifles/nonsense, a desert-wanderer of the illusion/imagination of existence
2
still/now in your imagination/thought is lowness and highness

'Nonsense, twaddle; --trifles, bagatelles'.
'Thinking, imagining, conceiving (esp. a false idea); --opinion, conjecture; imagination, idea, fancy;--suspicion, doubt; scruple, caution; distrust, anxiety, apprehension, fear; --a superstition'.
'Being found; invention; --being, existence; entity; life: essence, substance; --body; person, individual'.
'Imaging or picturing (a thing) to the mind; imagination, fancy; reflection, contemplation, meditation; forming an idea; idea, conception, perception, apprehension'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 68
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 332
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 112-113
Asi, Abdul Bari 125-126
Gyan Chand 213-214
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

This is one of those hyper-metaphysical ones that it's hard to pin down even enough to fix up a few possible readings. In a verse like this the usual parts of Ghalib's bag of tricks, like with its double meaning of 'still' and 'now', are hard even to plug in, because of the extreme open-endedness and generality of the interpretive possibilities. In this way the verse recalls the far more fascinating 41,4 . In both verses the second line seems to call into question the validity and/or desirability of judging things, of seeing them in terms of pairs of opposites. On this reading, {41,4} describes an arguably (though not explicitly) praiseworthy state of non-discrimination between 'defective and perfect', while the present verse scolds the addressee for discriminating between 'lowness and highness'. The commentators have a variety of (unprovable) ideas about this one. I can't add anything more substantially grounded myself. Nor, I suspect, given the structure of the verse, can anybody else. We can all fill in the lattice of abstractions with our own personal array of thoughts. Perhaps that's what Ghalib meant for such a do-it-yourself verse to accomplish. graphics/desert.jpg