=== |
FWP:
SETS == A,B; INEXPRESSIBILITY
MOTIFS
NAMES == DAKHNI
TERMS == DRAMATICNESS; INSHA'IYAHThis is what I call an 'A,B' verse, since each line is semantically independent. SRF praises the verse for this disconnection, since it causes the reader to experience the two lines as directly linked by a strong juxtaposition. And he speaks of the powerful dramatic immediacy of the second line.
It's an unusual 'A,B' verse, however, in that we aren't really in any doubt about how to connect the two lines. Most such verses get their effects by allowing (and in fact requiring) the reader to choose, without guidance from the verse, how to connect the two lines. Such built-in multivalence is part of Ghalib's basic tool-kit; it's something Mir uses too, though not as often. The fact that here the same formal technique is used to such different effect shows the flexibility of the tiny, pithy ghazal verse.
SRF's comparison of this verse with Ghalib's G{93,2x} is excellent. Especially the second lines of each verse-- Mir's so vivid and immediate, Ghalib's so mysterious and ominous. For other such evocative comparisons see
{733,2}
and
{740,3}.