Verse 41826amaage


G16

1
for the Lord 's sake, do justice to that madness of ardor--
2
{since / in that} we arrive at her door ahead of the Messenger !

'To dispense justice; to do justice (to), to appreciate, to give due praise (to), to praise duly'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 192
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 365-66
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

The commentators are sure that the verse evokes only one situation, but actually it's pretty open-ended. There are several things that could be going on: =The beloved has summoned a Messenger because she wishes to send someone a letter; the lover responds to the summons even faster than the Messenger can. =Somebody unknown has sent a Messenger with a letter to the beloved; the lover is lying in wait by her door to intercept him. =The Messenger will be admitted to the presence of the beloved, and the lover hopes somehow to pretend to be with him. =The lover now feels that his own letter is insufficient to his passion, and he wishes to correct or supplement it before it's shown to the beloved. Of course, all these are bizarre and somewhat mad kinds of behavior-- but then, that's exactly what the first line is calling on us to notice: the lover's 'madness of ardor'. For another case study of crazy eagerness in connection with the Messenger, see 46,4 . graphics/jaipurdoor.jpg