Poetry Collection

Delhi

A city is a physical space and also a metaphor. All cities have had a history and a character of their own. They are the citadels of hope but also instill fear. Poets have used the idea and image of city in different ways. While the earlier poets saw kindness in cities, the new poets, see cruelty in them. Here are a few variations on the image of city.

Total

28

Sher

26

Ghazal

2

Nazm

0

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dilli mein aaj bhik bhi milti nahin unhen tha kal talak dimagh jinhen taj-o-takht ka the couplet contrasts past grandeur with present destitution to show how swiftly fortune turns. “crown and throne” stand for power, prestige, and arrogant self-assurance, while “not even alms” marks utter helplessness. the emotional core is bitter irony: those intoxicated by rule are reduced to begging, yet even begging yields nothing. it warns that worldly authority is fragile and pride invites a harsh fall.

in dinon garche dakan mein hai badi qadr-e-sukhan kaun jae 'zauq' par dilli ki galiyan chhod kar the poet acknowledges that the deccan region (south india) currently offers better patronage and respect for poets than the declining delhi. however, he rhetorically asks who could possibly bear to leave delhi, prioritizing his deep emotional connection to the city's culture and streets over financial gain or fame elsewhere.

dilli mein aaj bhik bhi milti nahin unhen tha kal talak dimagh jinhen taj-o-takht ka the couplet contrasts past grandeur with present destitution to show how swiftly fortune turns. “crown and throne” stand for power, prestige, and arrogant self-assurance, while “not even alms” marks utter helplessness. the emotional core is bitter irony: those intoxicated by rule are reduced to begging, yet even begging yields nothing. it warns that worldly authority is fragile and pride invites a harsh fall.

in dinon garche dakan mein hai badi qadr-e-sukhan kaun jae 'zauq' par dilli ki galiyan chhod kar the poet acknowledges that the deccan region (south india) currently offers better patronage and respect for poets than the declining delhi. however, he rhetorically asks who could possibly bear to leave delhi, prioritizing his deep emotional connection to the city's culture and streets over financial gain or fame elsewhere.

amir-zadon se dilli ke mil na ta-maqdur ki hum faqir hue hain inhin ki daulat se meer taqi meer points to a bitter social irony: the rich and their circles are out of reach, not due to lack of worth but because inequality has been produced by them. the speaker’s poverty is presented as a consequence of the powerful’s “wealth,” suggesting exploitation and exclusion. the emotional core is wounded dignity mixed with quiet accusation: those who prosper also create the destitute they avoid.

dilli ke na the kuche auraq-e-musawwar the jo shakl nazar aai taswir nazar aai meer taqi meer portrays delhi as so altered and ghostly that it no longer feels like a living city. the lanes seem like drawn, lifeless “illustrated pages,” and every sight turns into a mere image. the metaphor suggests devastation and emotional numbness: reality has been reduced to a static scene. it is grief and nostalgia seeing the world as art because life has drained from it.

ai wae inqalab zamane ke jaur se dilli 'zafar' ke hath se pal mein nikal gai the couplet mourns a sudden political and personal ruin: the upheaval of the age becomes a force of oppression. “delhi” stands for sovereignty, home, and identity, and its slipping away “in an instant” captures how quickly power can vanish. the emotional core is grief mixed with helplessness before history’s harsh turn.

janab-e-'kaif' ye dilli hai 'mir' o 'ghaalib' ki yahan kisi ki taraf-dariyan nahin chaltin

ai saba main bhi tha aashufta-saron mein yakta puchhna dilli ki galiyon se mera nam kabhi

marsiye dil ke kai kah ke diye logon ko shahr-e-dilli mein hai sab pas nishani us ki the speaker says his inner grief became public through the ‘elegies’ he recited, so his pain spread among people. delhi turns into a witness: the city’s people carry “signs” of that sorrow as shared memories, stories, or traces. the metaphor suggests that personal heartbreak can leave a lasting mark on a whole community. it also hints at fame earned through suffering—grief becoming one’s identity.

kyun mata-e-dil ke lut jaane ka koi gham kare shahr-e-dilli mein to aise waqiye hote rahe

dil mera jalwa-e-ariz ne bahalne na diya chandni-chowk se zakhmi ko nikalne na diya

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