Caesar’s wife, we have been told, must be above reproach. But what about a poet’s wife? Is there a template for her? Must she be a silent muse or long-suffering soul-mate? Or, like Victorian children, should she be neither seen nor heard? Alys Faiz, wife of Urdu’s best-known poet, Faiz Ahmed Faiz, defies any such facile categorisations. Very much a person in her own right, she was a teacher, journalist, human rights activist, social worker and a poet. Without a doubt, she would have lived a rich and meaningful life had she not married Faiz. But being Faiz’s wife brought an extra dimension. For, not everyone has lived through CID raids and jail visits. Nor crouched against bedroom walls as Israeli rockets fly overhead and bombs are dropped over Beirut.