Font by Mehr Nastaliq Web

aaj ik aur baras biit gayā us ke baġhair

jis ke hote hue hote the zamāne mere

CANCEL DOWNLOAD SHER

Author : Altaf Hussain Hali

Edition Number : 005

Publisher : Anwarul Matabe, Lucknow

Origin : Lucknow, India

Year of Publication : 1926

Language : Urdu

Categories : Poetry

Sub Categories : Deewan

Pages : 178

Contributor : Raja Mahmudabad Library, Mahmudabad

deewan-e-hali
For any query/comment related to this ebook, please contact us at haidar.ali@rekhta.org

About The Book

خواجہ الطاف حسین حالی اردو کے نامورشاعر، نقاد اور سوانح نگار ہیں۔ حالی نے اپنی شاعری کا آغاز غزل گوئی سے کیا ۔ ابتدائی دور کی غزلوں میں روایتی رنگ پوری طرح موجود ہے ۔ زبان میں رنگینی اور دل کشی بھی ہے لیکن حالی غزل کے قدیم رنگ سخن سے سخت بیزار تھے ۔ چنانچہ لاہور سے دہلی آنے کے بعد 1875 ء سے انھوں نے نئے رنگ اور نئے انداز کی غزل گوئی کا آغاز کیا ۔ حالی کی جدید غزل اخلاقی اور اصلاحی خیالات کی ترجمان ہے۔ حالی کا نظریہ یہ تھا کہ علم و ادب اور شعر و حکمت کے ذرائع کو اصلاح معاشرہ اور تہذیب اخلاق کے لئے استعمال کیا جاسکتا ہے ۔ یہی نہیں بلکہ استعمال کیا جانا چاہئے ۔ چنانچہ وہ جدید ادب کی تحریک کے علمبرداروں میں شامل ہوگئے۔ زیر نطر حالی کا دیوان ہے جس میں قطعات، غزلیں، قصیدے، مرثیے، رباعیاں، تاریخیں اور متفرق اشعار شامل ہیں۔ جہاں حالی کے قدیم و جدید دونوں رنگ دیکھنے کو مل جاتے ہیں۔

.....Read more

About The Author

Khwaja Altaf Hussain Hali (1837-1914) was born in Panipat, where he also received his early education. On coming to Delhi, he learnt Arabic and Persian and received patronage from two major poets, Ghalib and Shefta. After Shefta’s death, he left for Lahore and joined Punjab Government Book Depot where he got an opportunity to read Western literature. Hali paid serious heed to Mohammad Hussain Azad’s call for the new Urdu poem and Sir Syed Ahmad Khan’s call for rationalism in social, political and educational matters of the Muslims in particular. These two influences determined his future course of development as a poet, critic, commentator, biographer, and translator.

Hali started writing as a poet of the traditional Urdu ghazal. Later, he initiated a more serious phase of his literary career which also marked the beginning of modernism in Urdu literature. He made a major case for simplicity of expression and seriousness of thought and purpose. His engagement with the writing of ameliorative poetry explains his distaste for panegyric and ghazal which, he argued, could no longer sustain the burden of new consciousness. Instead, he emphasized upon the contemporary relevance of narrative poetry and made a case for ‘natural poetry’, shorn of sentimentality and based in reality. While Hali wrote in various forms, he developed a composite view of life and art in close association with each other. His Muqaddama-i-Sher-o-shairi is, in many respects, the first critical manifesto of Urdu poetry like Wordsworth’s ‘Preface’ to the Lyrical Ballads that laid the critical parameters for the early nineteenth century Romantic poetry in English. Hali developed a serious discourse in his Muqaddama which is valued as an anthology of ideas concerning the nature of true art, its language, the parametres of its creation, and the making of taste. In Madd-o-jazar-e Islam, he reflected upon the rise and travails of Islam. In Tiryaaq-e Masmoom, he developed a discourse on religious disputation, in Majaalisu-n-Nisa, he projected an argument in favour of womens’ education in a fictional framework. Tabaqaat-ul Arz is his translation of an Arabic discourse. Hali wrote sober and scientific prose, plain and persuasive poetry, broadly representing the case of art for life’s sake. Hali‘s biographies of Sir Syed, Ghalib, and Persian poet Sadi remain authentic sources till this day. 


.....Read more
For any query/comment related to this ebook, please contact us at haidar.ali@rekhta.org

More From Author

Read the author's other books here.

See More

Popular And Trending Read

Find out most popular and trending Urdu books right here.

See More

Jashn-e-Rekhta | 13-14-15 December 2024 - Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium , Gate No. 1, New Delhi

Get Tickets
Speak Now