Ghazal 138, Verse 2

{138,2}*

hai kaa))inaat ko ;harakat tere ;zauq se
partav se aaftaab ke ;zarre me;N jaan hai

1) creation has movement through {Your relish/taste / the relish/taste for You}
2) from the sun's ray, life is in the sand-grain

Notes:

;zauq : 'Taste, enjoyment, delight, joy, pleasure, voluptuousness'. (Platts p.578)

 

jaan : 'The breath of life, vitality; life, spirit, soul, mind; self; animation, vigour, energy, force'. (Platts p.373)

Nazm:

That is, creation considers you its original source, and the claim of nature is running in your direction-- the way from the sun's ray, life occurs in the sand-grain. In this verse the sand-grain's being alive has given great pleasure. That is, he has given it as a simile for that which is alive, and the cause of similitude is movement. (147)

== Nazm page 147

Bekhud Dihlavi:

He has made the movement of sand-grains into a token of life entering into them, through which an extraordinary pleasure has been created. (203)

Bekhud Mohani:

Because of the way the sand-grains dance in the rays of the sun, the poet has called the sand-grains alive. Movement is a symbol of life. (269)

Arshi:

Compare {95,3}, {143,4}. (225, 257, 271)

Faruqi:

[Compare Mir's M{837,2}.]

FWP:

SETS
SUN: {10,5}
ZARRAH: {15,12}

That little phrase tere ;zauq se does a wonderfully evocative double duty here. While in English we can as a rule distinguish between 'the thought of you' (which is in my mind) and 'your thought' (which is in your mind), Urdu offers us no such grammatical choice. Only context (which leads us toward a primary reading of 'from you') can enable us to decide whether the ;zauq is 'from' you or 'for' you. For more on this, see {41,6}.

Needless to say, Ghalib has made sure that the available context admits both readings. For when we consider the second line, we find that it's easy to envision the ;zauq as flowing downward from Beloved to lover, just as the ray travels from the sun to the sand-grain. But because the sand-grain then has 'life', it's equally easy to envision the ;zauq as traveling backward toward the Beloved who is the giver of that life, just as the ever-changing glittery radiance of sand-grains creates a sense of movement. After all, the sand-grains themselves have now become tiny light-sources or suns, they too are agitated and emit their own bright little rays of responsiveness and desire.

As Arshi suggests, an excellent verse for comparison is {95,3}.