Most people who are acquainted with Ghalib’s poetry know that he was born on Rajab 8, 1212, corresponding to Dec 27, 1797. Most people are also aware that Ghalib was a gifted child who began composing poetry at the age of 11 or 12, was married to Umrao Begum at 13, moved from Agra to Delhi a couple of years later, and lived there for the rest of his life.
What many Ghalib fans don’t know is that there are many discrepancies between the dates and events recorded by Ghalib’s biographers. Altaf Hussain Hali’s Yadgar-i Ghalib (1897), and Malik Ram’s Zikr-i Ghalib (1938), are two renowned, pioneering works that paint an endearing portrait of Ghalib, focusing on his life and work, and peppered with anecdotes relating his extraordinary felicity with words and witty conversational skills.
Poet and litterateur Hali was Ghalib’s shagird. Despite being an advocate for ‘natural’ poetry, a somewhat anti-classical ghazal stance, he was a great admirer of Ghalib, and occasionally fudged facts to present his ustad in a positive light. Hali was not careful in checking dates. As per his account, Ghalib journeyed to Calcutta at the age of 40: “Mirza’s age was shy of 40 when he reached Calcutta via Lucknow.”
Khalilur Rahman Daudi’s meticulous edition of Yadgar-i Ghalib (1963) draws attention to this and many of Hali’s errors. Ram wrote a positively delightful Ghalib biography, crafted in the first person so that it reads like an autobiography. Later biographers, such as Ralph Russell and Khurshidul Islam (Ghalib, Life and Letters, 1969), seem to follow Hali and Ram almost uncritically.
Generally speaking, biographers construct Ghalib’s life through snippets from his numerous letters to friends and relatives. Ghalib has shared specific information about his genealogy, etc. on several occasions. The first instance of his birth date is recorded in the first edition of the Kulliyat-i Nazm-i Farsi of 1837. At the conclusion of this volume Ghalib wrote: “To this day from the hijrat of our last Prophet, 1,253 years have passed, and that my fortune’s star through the movement of the sky’s messenger has reached 41 years.” This means that in 1253 hijri, Ghalib, as per his own admission, was 41 years old.
There is also a birth chart or zaichah that was prepared by Ghalib himself. According to this horoscope, preserved at the Raza Library, Rampur, Ghalib was born on Sunday (yakshambah), Rajab 8, 1212. A copy of the horoscope was first published in the second edition of the Kulliyat-i Nazm-i Farsi (1863). The published version has the birth date 1214 hijri, which is obviously a copyist’s mistake. But Rajab 8, 1212, was not a Sunday; it was a Wednesday (chaharshambah). This seems a minor mistake, but, as we shall see, there are more inconsistencies than mere confusion of days. Besides, a horoscope that shows a birthday different from the ‘actual’ one raises a red flag as to its purpose, as well as validity.
Kamal Ahmad Siddiqi and Hanif Naqvi have published articles containing detailed research on Ghalib’s date of birth. Both scholars have presented an exhaustive list of references, gathered from the letters and other sources, pertaining to Ghalib’s date of birth. Important signposts in the great poet’s lifespan that determine the arc of his life are: the death of his father, death of his uncle, marriage, and move from Agra to Delhi.
Historical documents and biographies reveal there may be a reason behind differing accounts of the poet’s birthday
A significant, but dubious period, are the two years spent with his Iranian tutor, Abdus Samad. The Iranian traveller arrived in Agra sometime around 1811, and was invited by Ghalib to stay at his house for two years. Ghalib was clearly living in Agra at the time. Many scholars, notable among them Qazi Abdul Wudood, hold that the entire episode of an Iranian tutor was invented by Ghalib to justify his appropriate usage of Persian. The information about Ghalib’s teenage years is so scarce and hard to corroborate that one can either believe or disbelieve the existence of Abdus Samad in Ghalib’s life. My point is that if Ghalib could create a make-believe tutor, he could create a fictitious horoscope too.
It is not clear exactly when Ghalib took up permanent residence in Delhi. It appears from a letter that he wrote to Shiv Narain Aram, dated Oct 19, 1858, that he lived in Agra till he was at least 20 years old:
“When I was a youth (javan), I observed Munshi Bansidhar (Shiv Narain Aram’s grandfather) with Khan Sahib (Ghalib’s maternal grandfather, Kamidan Ghulam Husain Khan). Munshi Bansidhar was Khan Sahib’s petitioner in the claim he had filed with the government for possession of his lands in Kathim village. He was a lawyer who dealt in such cases. He and I were the same age. Perhaps Bansidhar was a year or two older or younger. I was 19 or 20; he must have been the same age. We played chess and spent time together, staying up way past midnight. Because his house was not far, he could leave whenever he wanted. Between his place and ours was Machiara prostitute’s house, with our two plazas in between. On one of the terraces of this plaza, I used to fly kites. Raja Balwan Singh and I used to have kite-fights.”
According to this letter, it seems Ghalib was living in Agra when he was nine, in his grandfather’s home. Perhaps he was not married at the time. This would make him at least 20 at the time of his marriage. It would push his date of birth from 1797 to 1790, or further back.
The move to Delhi would also happen after 1818. Another important document that could help us determine Ghalib’s age is an affidavit written in Ghalib’s hand on behalf of his mother. The document, dated 1804, is preserved in the Maulana Azad Library at Aligarh University. It is hard to believe that a six-year-old child (presuming that Ghalib was born in 1797) could have written that document or that it would be valid.