Verse 31821aabaa;Ndhte hai;N


G11

In this meter the first long syllable may be replaced by a short; and the next-to-last long syllable may be replaced by two shorts.


1
compared to your leisure, oh Lifetime
2
we/they versify/'bind' lightning as a hennaed foot

'Fronting, confronting; opposing, contending; opposite; --comparing; collating; --corresponding, matching; resembling, like; --in opposition (to, - ); in front (of), over against; face to face (with), in the presence (of); --in comparison (with)'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 92
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 335
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 159
Asi, Abdul Bari 166-167
Gyan Chand 269-270
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

As Bekhud Dihlavi makes clear, a hennaed foot is a slowed-down foot. While the elaborate henna pattern is drying, the owner of the feet can't walk at all without ruining all that work. And even after it's dried, the owner seeks to keep the design unmarred and show it off, since hennaed feet are for festive occasions. So the owner of the feet walks more fastidiously and delicately than usual, which means more slowly. (For more on henna, see 18,4 .) The first line could well prepare us for the obvious 'a lifetime is as fast as a lightning-flash.' But that turns out not to be the case at all. For it turns out that a lifetime is not 'as fast' as lightning. It's so much faster that compared to a lifetime, lightning itself is constructed or depicted-- is 'versified', incorporated into poetic diction-- as a hennaed foot. (For more on this use of , see 108,1 .) Lightning itself-- the unimaginably swift, darting, forceful, instantaneous-- is no better than a halting, careful, fastidiously placed foot, compared to the pace of the Lifetime. For another use of a hennaed foot, see 108,7 . And then-- just look at the radical shift of thought in the next verse, 108,4 . graphics/hennaedfoot.jpg