Ghālib and Shakespeare on the war in Ukraine
Ghālib: It
all began with Valdimir Putin telling Volodymyr Zelenskyy
about his greatness and the futility of Ukraine in trying to defy him,
Ik
khel hai aurañg-e-sulaimāñ
mire nazdīk
ik baat hai ejāz-e-masīhā
mire aage
Hotā
hai nihāñ gard meñ sahrā mire hote
ghistā
hai jabīñ ḳhaak pe dariyā mire aage
(aurañg-e-sulaimāñ: throne of Solomon or an illusion nazdīk: near, ejāz-e-masīhā:
marvel,
miracle, honour of the messiah,
nihāñ: hidden, concealed, gard: dust, sahrā: desert, jabīñ: forehead, ḳhaak:
dust, earth, dariyā: river. The
throne of mighty Solomon's is something trifling like a game for me, the
messiah's miracles are merely common happenings before me. Deserts themselves
disappear in a cloud of sand in my presence and rivers rub their foreheads on the shore in front of me.)
One can understand what this
menacing bully is made of. Look at the way he walks and looking at him I must
modify one of my evergreen shers:
Haiñ
aur bhī duniyā meñ jo chalte bahut
achchhe
kahte
haiñ ki Putin
kā hai andāz-e-khirām aur
(andāz-e-khirām: manner, style
of movement, walking. There be many in this world who walk very elegantly but everyone
says that the gait of this Putin is unparalleled)
Shakespeare: Like Maria in Twelfth Night, the whole world believed that Putin is foolishly argumentative and that
he would back down from war after amassing his troops on the border, “…he’s a great quarreller: and but
that he hath the gift of a coward to allay the gust he hath in quarrelling,
‘tis thought among the prudent he would quickly have the gift of a grave”. But Antony said in his famous ‘Friends, Romans and Countrymen’ speech in Julius
Caesar, “…Ambition should be
made of sterner stuff…” and it seems to have come true for this Putin.
Ghālib: Here's what Ukraine tells NATO:
Aah ko chāhiye ik umr asar hote tak
kaun jiitā hai tirī zulf ke sar hote tak
(Aah: sigh, moaning, asar: effect, influence zulf; tresses, sar hote tak: till
completion, conquering, accomplishment of a difficult task, till untanglement. A sigh
needs a lifetime to have an impact. Who would live, or one would not be alive
long enough, to witness the straightening, or smoothening, of your crinkling
curls.)
Aashiqī sabr-talab aur tamannā betāb
dil kā kyā rañg karūñ ḳhūn-e-jigar hote tak
(taġhāful: neglect, ḳhaak: dust, earth, ashes, worthless) Love seeks patience but
desires remain impatient, how long can I sustain with this pain of apathy. Till
my heart withers away?
Ham
ne maanā ki
taġhāful na karoge
lekin
ḳhaak
ho jā.eñge ham tum ko ḳhabar hote tak
(taġhāful: neglect, ḳhaak: dust, earth, ashes, worthless. I agree that you will not forsake me eventually, but I
will be turned to dust by the time I get your audience or indulgence.
Shakespeare: Zelensky wants to tell Biden, that
when even animals happen to hear a trumpet, they
all stand still, affected, but not this man Biden even on hearing the war
trumpets of Russia. He has realised that the man is all bluster,
he cannot be moved by our music, he is fit only for treason and game of artful
stratagems, his soul is as dull as night and dark as the underworld and nobody
like that should be trusted. Well, I have already covered it well through Lorenzo telling Jessica in The
Merchant of Venice
“…If they but hear
perchance a trumpet sound,
Or any air of music
touch their ears,
You shall perceive
them make a mutual stand…
…The man that hath no music in himself,
Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds,
Is fit for treasons, stratagems and spoils;
The motions of his spirit are dull as night
And his affections dark as Erebus:
Let no such man be trusted…”
Ghālib: This poor chap Zelenskyy is only getting verbal support and counsel that peace should prevail,
no real help in war.
Ye kahāñ kī dostī hai ki bane haiñ dost nāseh
koī chārasāz hotā koī ġham-gusār hotā
(nāseh: preacher, chārasāzi: doctor, physician, healer, ġham-gusār: comforter. What kind of friendship is this
that these friends seek to preach instead of trying to allay my pain and
sorrow?)
And Zelenskyy must be telling his western friends, this Joe Biden, particularly,
Be-niyāzī had se guzrī banda-parvar kab talak
ham kaheñge hāl-e-dil aur aap farmāveñge kyā
(Be-niyāzī: Lack of concern, indifference, banda-parvar: one who takes care of someone. Your callousness exceeds all bounds, how long will I keep pouring out my heart to you and all you merely ask is what then?)
Shakespeare:
Putin’s
arrogance will not work, however. Did I not have Agamemnon say in Troilus
and Cressida, “He that is proud eats up himself. Pride is his own glass, his own
trumpet, his own chronicle; and whatever praises itself but in the deed devours the deed in the praise."
Ghālib: Everyone thought that the Russians would stand in the centre of Kiev within a week of starting the invasion but now they are retreating! No show, I should say,
Thī
ḳhabar garm ki Ghālib ke uḌeñge purze
dekhne
ham bhī ga.e the pa tamāshā na huā
(ḳhabar: news, garm: warm,
purze: components, parts, tamāshā: spectacle. There was promise of murder and dismemberment of the lover and we too went to witness the
spectacle too but it was a damp squib).
Peace in sight? Today, Zelensky exclaims that all this talk of Russian withdrawal is a sham,
Kī mire qatl ke ba.ad us ne jafā se tauba
haa.e us zūd-pashīmāñ kā pashemāñ honā
(qatl: murder, jafā: cruelty, injustice, tauba: renunciation, zūd-pashīmāñ: swiftly repentant. After slaying me she has forsworn all cruciation and torture. Fie this quick and facile penitence!)
Shakespeare: Recall Romeo in Romeo
and Juliet, playing wittily on words and Mercutio not being able to compete
with him, saying, “Nay, if our wits run
the wild-goose chase, I am done, for thou hast more of the wild-goose in one of
thy wits than, I am sure, I have in my whole five." I think
this war is nothing but a wild goose chase for Putin.
Ghālib: On India’s stand,
the world must learn diplomatic ambivalence from us:
Imāñ mujhe roke hai jo khīñche hai
mujhe kufr
ka.aba mire pīchhe
hai
kalīsā mire
aage
(Imāñ: faith, honesty, kufr: heresy, paganism, heathenism, kalīsā: church, synagogue. My faith curbs me even as paganism draws me towards it, the mosque stands behind me and the church in my front.)
Shakespeare: More indecisive than you guys is this bloke Biden but even he pales in comparison to my creation, Hamlet. His indecision and quibble about his position in life destroyed everything. Appalled by the revelation by the ghost about the murder of his father and the former’s request to avenge his death by killing the treacherous Claudius, he says, “Haste me to know ’t, that I, with wings as swift As meditation or the thoughts of love, May sweep to my revenge.” But because he does not follow up on the resolve speedily, everyone around him, Polonius, Laertes, Gertrude, are dead, even Ophelia, for whom he says, “I loved Ophelia. Forty thousand brothers Could not with all their quantity of love Make up my sum…”. All this before he kills Polonius finally and dies. Even I do not know why he did kill Claudius, as a revenge for murdering his father or because he thought he was incestuous, “Here, thou incestuous, murderous, damnèd Dane, Drink off this potion. Is thy union here? Follow my mother.”
Ghālib: This angrez (Englishman) has taken us from Ukraine to his insipid plays…
Shakespeare: I do not even remember if I wrote this, but if I did, I did it for you Mr. Gaulib, “I would challenge you to a battle of wits, but I see you are unarmed.” And now, I have to rush to the Globe for another performance by the Lord Chamberlain’s Men instead of this idiotic clambake with you, Mr. Galling Glob. Adieu.
Ghālib: Yes, go ahead vamoose, take the patlī galī (narrow lane, or an escape route) because,
Aagahī dām-e-shunīdan jis qadar chāhe bichhā.e
mudda.ā anqā hai apne ālam-e-taqrīr kā
(Aagahī: awareness, dām-e-shunīdan: net of listening, mudda.ā: matter, issue, anqā: mythical bird like phoenix or simurgh, ālam-e-taqrīr: state of writing. The quest of awareness may cast its net of listening as wide as possible but it would be like the scarce, or mythical phoenix bird, it would escape your limited intelligence) Khudā-hāfiz.
Comments received from Mr. Himkar Tata, a fellow railwayman, which he could not paste here due to some technical issue:
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed going through the reflections of Mr. Sudhanshu Mani on the Russo-Ukraine imbroglio.The poetic twist given by him leaves a lingering impact on the reader. Using his own ingenuity, Mr.Mani
has beautifully captured the sardonicism, by interweaving the poetry of Shakespeare and Ghalib. East or West, the follies of mankind were always perceptible to a poet. What is happening in the 21st Century was visualized much ahead of time, in the 16th Century and 18th Century. A poet's lamentation holds good for all ages because of the inherent restlessness and thoughtlessness in man.
Great commentary on the situation
ReplyDeleteThanks sir
DeleteBrilliant sir!
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot
Delete