I can clearly recall the excitement of the planning of Shahryar's second collection - Satvan Dar (Seventh Door). It was published from Allahabad, under the aegis of Shabkhoon Kitab Ghar, the organization that supported the modernist journal that my father edited. Although, the Urdu language had received a set back because of India's Partition, for political reasons that we need not go into here, yet looking back on those years now, it seems that there was no dearth of talented Urdu writers in India. There was a curiosity and untrammelled enthusiasm among Urdu writers on both sides of the border to read each other's work, and books and journal flowed freely between India and Pakistan. In a culture where poets and poetry also thrive through mushairahs (poetry reading before an audience) there had always been a healthy sense of competition and rivalry among poets. With the creation of Pakistan, Indo-Pak mushairahs became the rage, and almost all the Indian Urdu poets, whether writing in the classical or Progressive or Modernist style got energized by the cross pollination from across the border.
I think Shahryar's meteoric rise as a poet both in the mushairah and literary circuit was partly due to the heightened literary scene of the 1960s. Progressivism was displaced by Modernism and the modernist journal Shabkhoon began publishing poetry across the borders. Shahryar had begun his poetic career under the wing of Khalilur Rahman Azmi (1927 -74), who was a brilliant, discerning theorist of Progressivism, and also a sensitive poet. Azmi become aware of the inexorable pull of modernism and welcomed it. His untimely death cut short an exceptional talent's fruition. However, Azmi's influence guided Shahryar towards the modern rather than the Progressive.
Shahryar's affiliation with Shabkhoon propelled him into the front ranks of a not just a modernist Urdu poet but a modernist ghazal poet as well, which is somewhat of an anomaly. The ghazal was reinventing itself in the 1960s. It successfully retained its form and structure -- the elaborate rhyme schemes of the two-line verse or sher, but enlarged its canvas and its idiosyncratic, stylised world to include themes that reflected the changed times. Shahryar's poetic genius helped in the transition of the ghazal to new pastures. He changed the language of the ghazal in subtle ways by incorporating new ways of expressing old ideas and also brought some new ideas packaged in the ghazal idiom: