The Concept Of Beloved in The Ghazal of Daag Dehlvi
Keywords:
Urdu poetry, Dagh Dahlavi, Classical Lyrics, Delicate Vagina, Emerging Figure, Femininity, Sarcastic, TamperingAbstract
In the history of Urdu poetry, Dahalavi Urdu is one of the leading poems of the Urdu classic era. Prior to the Dagh Dahlavi, the classical lyrics also show a strong tradition of beloved. As the stains came, the poem presented the beloved as a delicate vagina. Even Haley has strongly criticized this concept in poetry and poetry. In his poetry, Dagh Dahlavi presented a separate concept of beloved, which also shows similarity with classical poetry and also shows a clear difference. The stains gave Urdu lyrics a fierce and rhetorical accent. Before the stained Dahlavi, the lyrics were from the craving of the hajar or the reckless flight of imagination. Dagha's poetry revolves on one axis and that is love. Love feelings appear to be running in the poetry of the stains. Dagha Dahlavi's poetry is the poetry of connection. The stains were beautiful in the face. There is no significant importance in their life because they soon find another love. In the lyrics of Dahalavi, the masculine section has been used for the beloved, but the emerging figure in it is full of femininity. The poetry of the stains can be due to their family attributes, otherwise the woman who curses the curse. No honor seems to be a creature. Therefore, respect for it is not necessary. In their passion, feelings and thoughts are not the same. The serious expression of love appears to be a sarcastic and tampering. For this reason, the romantic angles of beauty and beauty in the curse of the stains are useful that are visible to Mir, Pain, Fire and Mighty.
References:
- Kamil Qureshi, Daagh Dehlvi: Hayat aur Karnamay, Delhi: Urdu Academy Publishers, 2003, p. 25.
- Ibid, p. 25.
- Kamil Qureshi, Dr., Urdu Ghazal, Lahore: Progressive Books Publishers, 1989, p. 50.
- Narang, Gopi Chand, Dr., Urdu Ghazal aur Hindustani Zehn o Tehzeeb, New Delhi: National Council for Promotion of Urdu, 1985, p. 34.
- Daagh, Mirza Khan, Dehlvi, Gulzar-e-Daagh, Lucknow: Naseem Book Depot, 1958, p. 49.
- , p. 43.
- Daagh, Mirza Khan, Dehlvi, Gulzar-e-Daagh, p. 48.
- , p. 62.
- , p. 63.
- , p. 93.
- , p. 95.
- , p. 100.
- , p. 106.
- , p. 108.
- , p. 168.
- Daagh, Mirza Khan, Dehlvi, Aftab-e-Daagh, Lucknow: Dar Matba‘ Qasmi, 1906, p. 467.
- Aftab Ahmad Siddiqi, Dr., Gulha-e-Daagh, Dhaka: Maktaba Arifeen, 1956, p. 93.
- Daagh, Mirza Khan, Dehlvi, Mehtab-e-Daagh, Ed. Tamkeen Kazmi, Lahore: Naya Idara Publishers, 1961, p. 584.
- , p. 732.
- , p. 885.
- , p. 619.
- Daagh, Mirza Khan, Dehlvi, Yadgar-e-Daagh, Ed. Tamkeen Kazmi, Lahore: Naya Idara Publishers, 1960, p. 598.
- , p. 605.
- Daagh, Mirza Khan, Dehlvi, Yadgar-e-Daagh, Ed. Tamkeen Kazmi, p. 390.
- Shahid Mahli, Daagh Dehlvi, New Delhi: Aziz Printing Press, 2001, p. 171.
- Daagh, Mirza Khan, Dehlvi, Mehtab-e-Daagh, Ed. Tamkeen Kazmi, p. 120.
- Daagh, Mirza Khan, Dehlvi, Yadgar-e-Daagh, Ed. Tamkeen Kazmi, p. 172.
- , p. 195.
- , p. 210.
- , p. 280.
Downloads