Urdu
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Earlier varieties of Urdu, variously known as Gujari, Hindawi, and Dakhani, show more affinity with eastern Punjabi and Haryani than with Khari Boli, which provides the grammatical structure of standard modern Urdu. The reasons for putting together the literary products of these dialects, forming a continuous tradition with those in Urdu, are as follows: first, they share a common milieu, consisting of Ṣūfī and Muslim court culture, increasingly dominated by the life and values of the urban elite; second, they display wholesale acceptance of Perso-Arabic literary traditions, including genres, metres, and rhetoric; third, they show an increasing acceptance of Perso-Arabic grammatical devices and vocabulary; and fourth, they tend to prefer Perso-Arabic forms over indigenous forms for learned usage.
Apart from themes and metaphysics, the influence of Ṣūfī hospices and royal courts can be seen in two practices that were essential to the development of Urdu poetry (and also unique to the Urdu milieu in the medieval period) and that still exist in modified forms. First, Urdu poets generally chose an ustād, or master, just as a Ṣūfī novice chose a murshid, or preceptor, and one’s poetic genealogy was always a matter of much pride. Second, poets read poetry in private or semiprivate gatherings, called mushāʿirah, which displayed hierarchies, status consciousness, and rivalries reminiscent of royal courts.
Urdu literature began to develop in the 16th century, in and around the courts of the Quṭb Shāhī and ʿĀdil Shāhī, kings of Golconda and Bījāpur in the Deccan (central India). In the later part of the 17th century, Aurangābād became the centre of Urdu literary activities. There was much movement of the literati and the elite between Delhi and Aurangābād, and it needed only the genius of Walī Aurangābādí, in the early 18th century, to bridge the linguistic gap between Delhi and the Deccan and to persuade the poets of Delhi to take writing in Urdu seriously. In the 18th century, with the migration of poets from Delhi, Lucknow became another important centre of Urdu poetry, though Delhi never lost its prominence.
The first three centuries are dominated by poetry. Urdu prose truly began only in the 19th century, with translations of Persian dāstāns, books prepared at the Delhi College and the Fort William College at Calcutta, and later with the writers of the Aligarh movement.
To focus on essential matters, the discussion that follows forgoes a chronological account of the poetry, concentrating instead on characteristics of particular genres and the achievements of the most significant of their practitioners up to 1857. There is one poet, however, who cannot be described as a practitioner of the classical Perso-Arabic traditions adopted by his fellow poets. Naẓīr Akbarābādī, who wrote in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, was a poet of consummate skill who chose to display it in short poems (in various forms) written in the language of popular speech as well as of literature. His themes show similar eclecticism. In his voluminous body of work, there are poems on such diverse topics as popular festivals, the seasons, the vanities of life, erotic pleasures and pursuits, dancing bears, and niggardly merchants. He is a master of the telling detail that immediately brings any event to life. Generally ignored by elitist poets and literary chroniclers of his time, Naẓīr has gained increasing respect and recognition as the first and best poet of the people.
Qasīdahs
Qasīdahs are poems written with a “purpose”—the purpose being worldly gain, in the case of poems praising kings and noblemen, or benefit in the afterworld, in the case of poems praising God, the prophet Muḥammad, and other holy personages. These panegyrics are generally overly long and are written in a highly ornate and hyperbolic style, the poets vying to display their prowess by using as many rhymes and discovering as many associative themes as possible. Because of their style and language they are of special interest to lexicographers. Not much scholarly work has been done on the qasīdahs written in the Deccan, but in northern India a number of poets are regarded highly for their achievements in this genre: in the 18th century, Sawdā and Inshāʾ, and in the 19th, Z̄awq and Ghālib.
Ḥaju and shahr-āshūb
Less ornate, if not less elaborate, and more edifying are the ḥaju (derogatory verses, personal and otherwise) and the shahr-āshūb (poems lamenting the decline or destruction of a city). They provide useful information about the mores and morals of the period from the 18th to mid-19th century and truly depict the problems facing the society at large. The poems are not formally restricted to any particular metre or stanza pattern. Sawdā again is one of the more famous names.
Mars̄iyeh
Mars̄iyeh means “elegy,” but in Urdu literature it generally means an elegy on the travails of the family and kinsmen of Ḥusayn (grandson of Muḥammad) and their martyrdom in the field of Karbalā, Iraq. These elegies and other lamentatory verses were read at public gatherings, especially during the month of Muḥarram. Although a large number of mars̄iyehs were written in the Deccan and at Delhi, it was in Lucknow, with the patronage of Shīʿite elite and royalty, that mars̄iyehs gained the tenor and magnitude of epic poetry. The two great masters of that 19th-century period were Mīr Anīs and Mīrzā Dabīr, who together established musaddas (a six-line stanza with an aaaa bb rhyme scheme) as the preferred form for mars̄iyehs and added several new topics and details to the ranks of associated themes, thus carrying the form beyond a simple lament. An interesting aspect of these elegies is that, although the scene and personae are Arab, there is no attempt at verisimilitude: Arab gallants and maidens speak and gesture like the elites of Lucknow. Perhaps this added to the pathos and effectiveness of the poems at public readings.
Mas̄navī
Mas̄navī was the preferred genre for all descriptive and narrative purposes, for it allows the most freedom (only the lines of each couplet must rhyme). In the Deccan, all major poets wrote at least one long mas̄navī, but lack of knowledge of the dialect has prevented their full appreciation. Thus, the more famous mas̄navīs are by later poets of Delhi and Lucknow, such as Mīr, Mīr Ḥasan, Dayā Shankar Nasīm, and Mīrzā Shawq. The topics of descriptive mas̄navīs range from mundane events of life, hunting trips of kings, and the vagaries of nature’s seasons to autobiographical discourses. Narrative mas̄navīs are considerably longer, running into hundreds of couplets. In the Deccan several poets wrote abridged versions of Persian mas̄navīs, but many others wrote original compositions utilizing Indian romances as well as the better known Persian and Arabic ones. Apart from the names of the protagonists in the mas̄navīs inspired by Persian and Arabic poems, all else is always local; the landscape, cityscape, processions, customs and rituals, social values and taboos, even the physical characteristics of the people are totally Indian, though dominantly Muslim and feudal. Despite their length, these narratives gained much popularity and, at least in northern India, were often read in public places, in much the same way as storytellers told stories. The mas̄navī form was also used by some of the Hindi Ṣūfī poets.
Ghazal
For the most part, the history of Urdu poetry in India is the story of Urdu ghazal, which has been the favourite of both poets and their audiences in every period. A short lyric, with prosodic requirements of both metre and rhyme, ghazal demands great skill and thought from the poet, for its couplet must be a complete semantic entity and fully express a whole, well-integrated poetic experience. Favourite themes are erotic love, Ṣūfī love, and metaphysics. Naturally, Urdu poets began by closely imitating, often even plagiarizing, Persian masters, but later on they spoke in a more authentic voice. They continued, however, to employ a vocabulary of love that owed almost everything to Persian and shared very little with the traditions of lyrical poetry in other Indian languages. For example, with few exceptions, the lover is always masculine; expression of love is never made by a woman. Unique, too, is the use of masculine grammatical forms and imagery for the beloved, even when, in every other way, the poem is clearly celebrating heterosexual love. This peculiarity, as well as other traditions borrowed from Persian masters, gives a ghazal couplet a tremendously wide range of interpretations. It is amazing indeed what a master poet can condense into one terse couplet.
The two greatest ghazal writers in Urdu are Mīr Taqī Mīr, in the 18th century, and Mīrzā Asadullāh Khān Ghālib, in the 19th. They are in some ways diametrical opposites. The first prefers either very long metres or very short, employs a simple, non-Persianized language, and restricts himself to affairs of the heart. The other writes in metres of moderate length, uses a highly Persianized vocabulary, and ranges wide in ideas. Mīr speaks of passion and pathos; Ghālib betrays a skeptic’s mind and leaves nothing unquestioned, not even his feelings. But both have left indelible marks on the ideas and emotions of succeeding generations. Ghālib wrote poetry in Persian as well as Urdu and also published a couple of volumes of letters in Urdu that helped usher in modern prose. In many ways he bridges the gap separating the medieval sensibility from the modern. The contemporary mind, however, is also moved by the authentic passion of Mīr, idolizing him for the sublimity of his concept of love and for his personal integrity. The poems of Ghālib and Mīr represent the best of the Urdu ghazal; and the Urdu ghazal, as an anonymous wit has remarked, is the Muslims’ greatest gift to India, after the Tāj Mahal.
C.M. Naim