'Ghalib ka hai andaz-e-bayan aur': Mirza Ghalib and his immortal 'shayri'

'Ghalib ka hai andaz-e-bayan aur': Mirza Ghalib and his immortal 'shayri'

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mirza ghalib

VIKAS DATTA Celebrated poet of romance and revolution, Faiz Ahmed Faiz, titled his first book of verse "Naqsh-e-Faryadi" after the opening words of the first ghazal in this doyen of Urdu poetry's Diwan, while the irrepressible Asrar-ul-Haq 'Majaz Lakhnavi' used the same lines to great effect in real life. He was at a mushaira when a baby began crying in the audience. Stopping his own verse, Majaz instead recited the first line of the couplet in an appeal: "Naqsh fariyaadi hai kis ki shokhi-e-tahreer ka... (Whose handwriting is this complainant a copy of...)" That is the abiding magic, and influence, of Mirza Ghalib, who with his white-bearded and tall fur hat sporting visage is among those of a handful of poets familiar by their very appearance - Shakespeare, Pushkin, Tagore, Tolstoy, et al even as he is being slowly forgotten in his homeland. This is rather unfortunate for Mirza Ghalib, whose fame was mostly posthumous and appeal transcends the Urdu he wrote in. A pre-eminent poet of Urdu and the only one along with Allama Mohammad Iqbal to have specific sections of study and criticism named after him - Ghalibiyat and Iqbaliyat - Mirza Ghalib, whose 220th birth anniversary falls on Tuesday (December 27) remains a remote figure for most Indians -- especially in the 21st century. This is despite a popular film, TV series, a host of ghazals, and even appearance in at least one Bollywood song ("Ishq par zor nahin Ghalib ne kaha hai.." in "Ek Duje Ke Liye") and the occasional furore over preserving his 'haveli' in Old Delhi. How many of us know Mirza Asadullah Khan 'Ghalib' (1797-1869) began writing with the pen name 'Asad', was known as 'Mirza Nausha' in his time, and was eclipsed by a host of contemporaries -- right from the Emperor Bahadur Shah 'Zafar' himself, to the royal preceptor, Sheikh Ibrahim 'Zauq', Hakim Momin Khan 'Momin', Mufti Sadruddin Khan 'Azurda' and more. He was equally adept in Persian too -- like all educated and cultured Indians to the time -- Hindu and Muslim -- and also has a Diwan of Persian poetry to his credit. He was an incomparable prose stylist too, who could have established a prized place for himself in the pantheon of Urdu literature on the strength of his correspondence and autobiography only. But it is his Urdu ghazals -- a total of 235 -- he is most known for, especially their rendition by the subcontinent's most famous singers - K.L. Saigal, Mohammed Rafi, Habib Wali Mohammad, Mehdi Hasan, Ghulam Ali, Jagjit Singh, Begum Akhtar, Suraiyya, Farida Khanum, Lata Mangeshkar, Asha Bhosle, Abida Parveen and down to Rahat Fateh Ali Khan. Lets take a dozen of his most famous ghazals to give a taste of his poetry, which spanned both simple and complex construction, and dealt with issues of longing, identity, expression, existence and loss, besides the staple of love. One of the simplest begins "Dil-e-nadaan tujhe hua kya hai/Aakhir is dard ki dava kya hai" and has that immortal couplet: "Main bhi munh mein zabaan rakhta hoon/Kaash poochho ki mudda kya hai". On the other hand, there is one beginning: "Bazeecha-e-atfaal hai duniya mere aage/Hota hai shab-o-roz tamasha mere aage". If this makes you reach out to an Urdu speaking friend, "bazeecha-e-atfal" means children's playground and was a phrase he introduced to the Urdu language. Then there is one beginning "Aah ko chaahiye ik umr asar hone tak..." with its evocative "Aashiqi sabr-talab aur tamanna betaab/Dil ka kya rang karun khoon-e-jigar hone tak" and "Ham ne maana ke taghaful na karoge lekin/Khaak ho jayenge ham tum ko khabar hone tak" and ending "Gham-e-hasti ka 'Asad' kis se ho juz marg ilaaj/Shama har rang mein jalti hai sahar hone tak". But one of his most moving ones -- perhaps due to Begum Akhtar's soulful rendition -- is "Dil hi to hai na sang-o-khisht dard se bhar na aaye kyun/Royenge ham hazaar baar koi hamen sataye kyun", and ending "'Ghalib'-e-khasta ke bagair kaun se kaam band hai/Roie zaar-zaar kaa, kijiye haaye-haaye kyun". It is is not entirely unalloyed despair, for there are also couplets like "Jab vo jamaal-e-dilfaroz, surat-e-mahr-e-nimroz/Aap hi ho nazaarasoz, parde mein munh chupaye kyun" - or loosely "Why does that one whose beauty enlightens the heart, with a gaze like the midday sun/Whose look is itself burning veil her face". And then, can we forget "Hai bas ki har ik unke ishaare mein nishan aur/Karte hai mohabbat to guzarta hai guman aur" and ending with "Hai aur bhi duniya mein sukhanvar bahut achchhe/Kahte hai ki 'Ghalib' ka hai andaaz-e-bayaan aur". This could have been the best tribute for himself but his later contemporaries - as shown above - were kinder. This is how the great poets live on.

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