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From Ghalib to Neruda: A sociological reading of Dhanwa's 'Sleep' and 'White Night'

By Ravi Ranjan* 
Alok Dhanwa's Hindi poems "Sleep" (Ninda) and "White Night" (Sapheda Rata) represent two poles of a single modern sensibility. Where "Sleep" yearns for weightless peace of the soul, "White Night" laments displacement, eroded memory, and collective mourning. Together, they form a profound meditation on modern civilization's burdens.
The Politics of Sleep
"Sleep" addresses sleep as "the wanderer of the night"—a mysterious, autonomous presence beyond human control. The poet pleads for sleep so light "that even a single straw would leave no weight upon it." This demand for absolute weightlessness reveals modern life's heaviness: worries, responsibilities, and memories that transform rest into burden.
Sociologically, the poem protests contemporary capitalism's work culture. In post-industrial society, productivity measures human worth, making sleep a "rare commodity" viewed as wasted time. The "pressure of a straw" symbolizes social competition, future insecurity, and constant performance demands that follow individuals even into rest. The address to sleep as "wanderer" expresses desire to escape social discipline—rules, schedules, roles that bind individuals while "wandering" represents liberation from such chains.
This sociology reveals that peaceful sleep has become a class privilege. For lower and middle classes, sleep is surrounded by anxieties. Beneath the poem's tenderness lies deep social discontent demanding restoration of humanity's basic natural right to tension-free rest.
Scientific and Aesthetic Dimensions
From a somnological perspective, the poem's plea for a pressure-free state mirrors the brain's "glymphatic system," which clears metabolic waste only during deep sleep when external stimuli cease. The image of "grass of water in the moon" symbolizes neuroplasticity—the brain's capacity to reorganize memories and emerge renewed.
Artistically, the poem exemplifies "minimalism"—creating dense, transparent imagery with few words. The contradiction between "pressure" and "weightlessness" creates subtle sensory experience. The straw represents matter's smallest unit; its absence signifies supreme liberation—a "void" where consciousness transcends mental gravity.
The concluding image—"grass of water in the moon"—recalls surrealist art, combining impossible elements: moonlight, water's fluidity, grass's softness. This defies logic yet feels true at sensory level. The poem is a "prayer" addressed not to god but to nature itself—an artistic honesty compelling readers inward.
Ghalib's Restlessness, Neruda's Peace
When placed alongside Ghalib's classical restlessness, Dhanwa's poem seeks sensory answers to Ghalib's philosophical questions. Ghalib's couplet—"Death has a fixed day / Why does sleep not come all night?"—frames insomnia as existential uncertainty. Dhanwa transforms this into anguished prayer for liberation from "straw's pressure."
With Neruda, connections emerge through shared vision of sleep as "space." Neruda writes: "Let me sleep more deeply, so I may reach that maritime peace where time loses meaning." Both poets see sleep as liberation from worldly time's pressure—Neruda's vastness meeting Dhanwa's translucency.
The poem's philosophical depth rests on "neti-neti" (not this, not that)—defining sleep not by what it is but what it is not: no pressure, no weight. This negativity seeks supreme positivity—consciousness freed from knots. Liberation from "straw's pressure" becomes supreme freedom.
White Night: Displacement and Lament
"White Night" emerges as rare contemporary Hindi poetry connecting personal memory with civilizational crisis. Written in post-liberalization India amid rising communal frenzy, it captures cities losing cultural identity while becoming violence and market hubs.
When the poet stands on the city roof remembering jungle and barasinghas (deer), this isn't romantic nostalgia but search for origins where human-nature relationships remained unbroken. Sociologically, the poem articulates displacement pain—city living as geographical change entangled with root-uprooting.
The poet's assertion that "family's breaking itself is the city's foundation" exposes modern urbanization's bitter truth: individuals severed from ancestral villages and environments become futureless crowds. Drawing on Zygmunt Bauman's "liquid modernity," man cut from permanent roots becomes liquid consumer—the city becomes "place of flows" never stable, where market and violence alliance produces consumerist assimilation.
History, Memory, and the Politics of Mourning
The poem's historical scope extends from Lucknow, Allahabad, and Banaras to Lahore, Karachi, and Baghdad. History appears not in dates but in uprooted geographies. The question "Lahore is now in which country?" dismisses political boundaries to seek cultural Lahore preserved neither in Urdu nor Punjabi nor nation-builder maps.
Edward Said's concept of exile resonates here—the exiled person swings between real and imaginary places, experiencing "unhealable rift between human being and native place." In "White Night," this rift appears clearly in moonlight's brightness. Memory becomes not nostalgia but active resistance field for exiled consciousness.
Baghdad's mention invokes imperialist war horrors. Walter Benjamin's "angel of history" faces the past while seeing one continuous catastrophe—progress as storm pushing us forward while debris accumulates. Moonlight in "White Night" functions similarly: it illuminates but makes debris more visible. The poet's question "can they rebuild Baghdad again?" connects with Benjamin's critique that "progress" ideology hides destruction.
Violence, Market, and Shared Culture
The poem exposes violence-market interrelationship as systematic: violence needs emptiness to flourish. The market requires rootless consumers, achieved by cutting individuals from group, tradition, and natural environment. City becomes vast refugee camp where everyone is futureless, and market exploits this insecurity.
This violence is multi-dimensional—not only street violence but invisible market preparing violence and power's violence. Cultural centers like Lucknow and Allahabad "diminish"—meaning marketization kills local cultures once built on dialogue. "Debates do not proceed, murders happen" depicts intellectual emptiness that market and violent powers create together.
Drawing on Judith Butler's "precarious life," the poem asks: whose lives are "grievable"? The Baghdad girl whose turquoise handkerchief exists only in memory, the child "walking like a camel" amid debris, Lahore's "breath" entangled with the poet's—all symbolize "ungrievable lives" considered disposable by nation-states. The poem makes them grievable through memory, images, and "White Night's" cold brightness.
Anthropocene Pain
"White Night" captures Anthropocene pain—where humanity's greatest achievements (technology, development) destroy nature and hollow culture. Scientists like Paul Crutzen identified this new geological epoch where human activity leaves permanent marks in earth's layers.
The poet's remembrance of mahogany trees and tough grass symbolizes primordial dignity that market and urban violence destroyed first. Mahogany represents rooted life with unbroken human-nature dialogue. Tough grass—usually soft but here "strong-smelling"—represents neglected public life with distinct identity, resisting urban footpaths' lifelessness.
The pain is cultural and emotional: the distance we created from nature, the emptiness filled by market consumption, hatred, violence. Lahore, Baghdad, Banaras—once shared culture symbols—now buried in debris or lost in market glitter.
Conclusion: Resistance Through Memory
"White Night" ends with Bhagat Singh—not as armed revolutionary but as symbol of difficult non-violence and moral firmness rejecting warlords' destructive systems. His martyrdom breaks the "white night's" neutrality where the world becomes futureless refugee camp.
The poem proposes that shared culture's rebirth will happen when we refuse surrendering memories to market, find identity beyond nation-builder maps dividing humans, and protect that "spring and fountain" maintaining love's coolness amid hatred's sand.
Ultimately, Dhanwa's two poems form a continuum: "Sleep" seeks weightless peace from modern burdens; "White Night" laments what those burdens destroy. Together, they argue that genuine rest and genuine memory are revolutionary acts against systems reducing humans to consumers. Sleep becomes civilizational right; memory becomes resistance territory. In the Anthropocene era, both poems remind us that protecting "grass of water" within ourselves means remaining human.
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*Professor & former Head (Retd.), Department of Hindi, University of HyderabadThis is the abridged version of the author's original paper 

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