The Ghat of the Only World — Amitav Ghosh
"If I am to die, let me do so with my eyes open, in a world full of colour and flavour." — Agha Shahid Ali
1. About the Story
'The Ghat of the Only World' is a PORTRAIT OF FRIENDSHIP in the face of death. Amitav Ghosh (one of India's greatest living novelists) writes about his friendship with Agha Shahid Ali — the celebrated Kashmiri-American poet — during the last months of Shahid's life (brain cancer, 2001). Shahid asked Ghosh: 'Write something about me after I'm gone.' This essay/chapter is that promise fulfilled.
2. Characters
Agha Shahid Ali
- Kashmiri-American poet — one of the finest of his generation
- Born in Kashmir; lived in America
- Deeply attached to KASHMIR — his poetry returns to it again and again
- Diagnosed with brain cancer in 2000–2001
- Facing death with: poetry, food, friendship, memories of Kashmir
- ASKED Amitav Ghosh to write about him after death
- Died: December 8, 2001
Amitav Ghosh (Author/Narrator)
- Indian novelist in English — 'The Shadow Lines', 'The Glass Palace', 'Sea of Poppies'
- Friend of Shahid — close in the last months
- The essay is an ACT OF FRIENDSHIP — a promise kept
- Observer, tender, unflinchingly HONEST about death
3. Themes
1. Friendship and Death
The story is about being PRESENT for someone who is dying — not with despair, but with COMPANIONSHIP. Shahid and Ghosh cooked together, talked poetry, remembered Kashmir. Death was present — but so was LIFE.
2. Kashmiri Exile and Belonging
Shahid's poetry is deeply KASHMIRI. Even in America, even dying, he returns to Kashmir — its gardens, its mountains, its sorrow (the political conflict). The title references a poem by Faiz Ahmed Faiz.
3. Food, Poetry, and the Senses
Shahid faced death by EMBRACING the sensory world — cooking (rogan josh, biryani), poetry, flavour, conversation. 'If I am to die, let me do so with my eyes open, in a world full of colour and flavour.'
4. The Act of Writing as Remembrance
Ghosh WRITES this piece because Shahid ASKED him to. Literature (this very chapter) is a PROMISE kept, a FRIENDSHIP honoured. The essay IS the memorial.
4. Title Significance
- 'The Ghat of the Only World' — from a poem by Faiz Ahmed Faiz: 'The ghat of the only world...'
- For Shahid: the 'ghat' (riverbank, place of departure) = DEATH as the final journey
- The 'only world' = THIS world, which is all we have. No afterlife promised. Just THIS.
5. Conclusion
'The Ghat of the Only World' is ELEGY and PORTRAIT and PROMISE:
- A dying poet asks his novelist friend to write about him
- The friend does — capturing the last months of FOOD, POETRY, MEMORY, FRIENDSHIP
- Shahid facing death not with fear but with SENSORY FULLNESS
- The essay itself is the monument Shahid requested
Agha Shahid Ali died at 52. Amitav Ghosh wrote him into permanence. This chapter is that writing — a friend's promise, honoured.
