Fidvi Lahori


Fidvi Lahori, born Mukund Lal was an 18th-century Urdu poet from Lahore, Punjab. Fidvi was his ''takhallus.''

Biography

Born in a Hindu Bania family and originally named Mukund Lal, Fidvi converted to Islam and adopted Mirza Fidai Beg as his new name. He spent several years at Isfahan and later migrated to Delhi where he became a pupil of Sabir Ali Sabir. Fidvi had written a qasida for Ahmad Shah and was rewarded with a horse, a sword and a thousand rupees by the emperor. He found employment under Nawab Muhammad Yar Khan but soon left his court and later took service of Nawab Zabita Khan. Fidvi's poetic rivalry with Mirza Sauda was well-known. Sauda wrote a number of satirical works characterising Fidvi, including one in Punjabi, which are a part of his kuliyat. Fidvi later returned to Lahore where he died in 1780; according to Mashafi he died in Moradabad.

Poetry

Little of Fidvi's Diwan has survived. One of his oft-quoted couplets has become a proverb:
English translation: