Verse 11816uud-echiraa;G-e kushtah hai


G1

1
have mercy, cruel one, for what is the existence of an extinguished/'killed' lamp?
2
the pulse of one sick from faithfulness is the smoke of an extinguished/'killed' lamp

'Killed, slain; —s.m. One who is killed or slain, a victim; (poet.) a lover'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 151
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 265-66
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 218
Asi, Abdul Bari 228-230
Gyan Chand 351-353
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

Such a simple, even repetitive, verse, and yet not without its own charm. Why should the 'cruel one' consent to 'have mercy'? Here are some possible reasons for the exhortation: =Because the lover is already dead-- nothing has any effect on him now, and he should be left in peace. =Because she's already killed the lover-- she might as well stop tormenting him now, since it's a waste of energy. =Because the lover isn't quite dead yet; but if she goes on tormenting him, he soon will be-- and she might want him for something in the future. The second line offers the lovely, apt, and quite effective metaphor of the lover's pulse as the smoke of an extinguished-- or literally, of course, a 'killed'-- lamp. The smoke emerges in feeble irregular little bursts, disperses rapidly, and soon ceases entirely. The one who is 'sick from faithfulness' has a disease that is guaranteed to be mortal; even under the best of circumstances, the lover is always doomed. graphics/lampsmoke.jpg