عشق مجھ کو نہیں وحشت ہی سہی

غزل by Mirza Ghalib

عشق مجھ کو نہیں وحشت ہی سہی

Mirza Ghalib

Font Size
Line Height
عشق مجھ کو نہیں وحشت ہی سہی
میری ویرانی کو آبادی ہی سہی
آج ہی سے آپ کو کل کی ہی سہی
ہم کو معلوم ہے جنت کی حقیقت لیکن
دل کے خوش رکھنے کو غالب یہ خیال اچھا ہے
ہم نے دشوار کو آسان کیا ہے
بے خودی بیشتر اچھی ہے گدائی سے غالب
سائل کو دیتے نہیں خالی جھولی ہی سہی
ہم کو غیروں کے ستانے کی ضرورت ہی سہی
دیکھیے پاتے ہیں عشاق بتوں سے کیا فیض
اک برہمن نے کہا ہے کہ یہ سال اچھا ہے
شکر ہے کہ آپ کو اپنی خبر ہو گئی

مصنف کے بارے میں

Mirza Ghalib

Mirza Ghalib

1797 - 1869, Agra, Mughal Empire (present-day India)

Mirza Asadullah Baig Khan, known by his pen name Ghalib, was a prominent Urdu and Persian poet during the last years of the Mughal Empire. He is considered one of the most popular and influential poets of the Urdu language. Today, Ghalib remains popular not only in India and Pakistan but also among the Hindustani diaspora around the world. Ghalib was born in Agra, into a family descended from Aibak Turks who moved to Samarkand after the downfall of the Seljuk kings. His paternal grandfather, Mirza Qoqan Baig Khan, was a Seljuq Turk who had immigrated to India from Samarkand during the reign of Ahmad Shah. He worked at Lahore, Delhi and Jaipur, was awarded the subdistrict of Pahasu and finally settled in Agra. He had four sons and three daughters. Mirza Abdullah Baig Khan and Mirza Nasrullah Baig Khan were two of his sons. Ghalib's father, Mirza Abdullah Baig Khan, married Izzat-ut-Nisa Begum, and then lived at the house of his father-in-law. He was employed first by the Nawab of Lucknow and then the Nizam of Hyderabad, Deccan. Mirza Abdullah Baig Khan died in a battle in 1803 in Alwar and was buried at Rajgarh (Alwar, Rajasthan). At the age of thirteen, Ghalib married Umrao Begum, daughter of Nawab Ilahi Bakhsh. He soon moved to Delhi, along with his younger brother, Mirza Yousuf Khan, who had developed schizophrenia at a young age and later died in Delhi during the chaos of 1857.

مکمل پروفائل دیکھیں

Related Ghazals