Verse 9after 1816aa;Nkiye hu))e


G3

1
again Ardor is making a search for a buyer
2
having made a presentation of the merchandise of intelligence and heart and life

'To make representation (of), to represent, to submit, to state humbly; to report; to memorialize; to make application (for), to apply (for), to request, beg'.
'Merchandise; goods, chattels, furniture; clothes, effects; utensils; valuables'.

References
Arshi, Imtiyaz Ali Ghazal# 190
Raza, Kalidas Gupta 301-02
Nuskhah-e-Hamidiyah 284-286
Hamid Ali Khan Open Image

On the structure of this ghazal as a kind of loosely 'continuous' one, see 233,1 . The personified quality of 'Ardor' is ready to sell off his best goods. In fact, he wants to have a 'going out of business sale' and get it all over with at once-- he's ready to dispose of his intelligence and heart and life as a kind of package deal, available cheap to some lucky buyer. You'd think he'd be besieged with customers; but apparently he's not. For he's 'again' (since this is the normal experience of lovers) having to go out and beat the bushes to find a taker. Of course, he only needs one. But that one has to be special, unique, irresistible; she has to ravish him completely through a glimpse or a glance. She'll be a 'taker' in the sense that she'll 'give' him very little-- but that little must be devastating, obsessive, inescapable; it must 'take' over his whole life. Compare 60,7 , which makes clear how choosy such a 'seller' can be. graphics/heartsale.jpg