Verse 101847aa;Nnahii;N


G3

1
you say, 'What is written in your fate/'forehead-written'?'
2 a
as if on my forehead there is not the mark of idol-prostration!
2 b
is the mark of idol-prostration on my forehead not speaking?

'Lit, 'written on the forehead'; destiny, fate, lot, fortune'.
'Saying, speaking;... --a speaker... --adv. As you (or as one) would say, as it were, as though, so to speak; thus, in this manner'. s

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 108
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 204
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

One of the signs of an especially pious Muslim is supposed to to be doing so many prostrations that a sort of semi-permanent mark appears on his or her forehead where it has touched the ground so often. Here, the presence of that mark is put to wonderfully effective use: it's combined with the equally traditional idea that one's fate-- , literally 'head-written'-- has been inscribed on one's forehead at birth. The use of in the second line generates two interpretations: the more common 'as if' or 'so to speak' one, and the literal 'speaking' one. For discussion and more examples of this multivalence, see 5,1 . Faruqi rightly points out that on either reading, the speaker's matter-of-fact assumption that 'the very meaning of prostration is idol-prostration' adds to the piquancy of the verse. Can the addressee not be the beloved, though? Faruqi feels not, but it seems to me that a lover might well speak abstractly or detachedly in such a situation, even to the beloved. All the more so since, as Faruqi also points out, the second line appears to be said under the lover's breath, as he mutters indignantly to himself. The result of all this is excellent wordplay, of course, but (as almost always with Ghalib) meaning-play as well. We have Indic/Persianized pairs of words for speaking [], writing []; we have the and the . And in the second line we have some elegant sound echoes: . Isn't it a lovely, adroit verse? We have the spoken and the written-- and both are trumped by the unspoken and unwritten, by the very , 'mark', itself. graphics/prostration.jpg