The first time that Agha Shahid Ali spoke to me about his approaching death was on 25 April 2001. The conversation began routinely. I had telephoned to remind him that we had been invited to a friend’s house for lunch. Although he had been under treatment for cancer for some fourteen months, Shahid was still on his feet and perfectly lucid, except for occasional lapses of memory. I heard him thumbing through his engagement book and then suddenly he said: ‘Oh dear. I can’t see a thing.’ There was a brief pause and then he added: ‘I hope this doesn’t mean that I’m dying...’ I did not know how to respond: his voice was completely at odds with the content of what he had just said, light to the point of jocularity. I mumbled something innocuous: ‘No Shahid — of course not. You’ll be fine.’ He cut me short. In a tone of voice that was at once quizzical and direct, he said: ‘When it happens I hope you’ll write something about me.’ I was shocked into silence and a long moment passed before I could bring myself to say the things that people say on such occasions. ‘Shahid you’ll be fine; you have to be strong...’ From the window of my study I could see a corner of the building in which he lived, some eight blocks away. It was just a few months since he moved there: he had been living a few miles away, in Manhattan, when he had a sudden blackout in February 2000. After tests revealed that he had a malignant brain tumour, he decided to move to Brooklyn, to be close to his youngest sister, Sameetah, who teaches at the Pratt Institute—a few blocks away from the street where I live. Shahid ignored my reassurances. He began to laugh and it was then that I realised that he was dead serious. I understood that he was entrusting me with a quite specific charge: he wanted me to remember him not through the spoken recitatives of memory and friendship, but through the written word. He knew that my instincts would have led me to search for reasons to avoid writing about his death: I would have told myself that I was not a poet; that our friendship was of recent date; that there were many others who knew him much better and would be writing from greater understanding and knowledge. All this Shahid had guessed and he had decided to shut off those routes while there was still time. ‘You must write about me.’ Finally, I said: ‘Shahid, I will: I’ll do the best I can.’
SSC CGL 20201)What did Shahid request the narrator to do?
Write about him after his death
SSC CGL 20202)Shahid was perfectly ‘lucid’. This suggests he was:
speaking coherently
SSC CGL 20203)Shahid’s voice was full of ‘jocularity’. This means it was:
humorous
SSC CGL 20204)Which of these was NOT an excuse that the narrator thought of to decline Shahid’s request?
That he was too busy
SSC CGL 20205)Why had the narrator called Shahid Ali?
To remind him about a lunch invitation
SSC CGL 20206)Shahid had moved to Brooklyn to:
be close to his youngest sister
SSC CGL 20207)The narrator was reluctant to write about Shahid because:
it would be emotionally tough for him
SSC CGL 20208)What made Shahid think his end was near?
He suddenly couldn’t see anything.
SSC CGL 20209)What kind of person was Shahid Ali?
Full of life
SSC CGL 202010)What disease was Shahid Ali suffering from?
Brain tumour