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ma:tlab : 'A question, demand, request, petition; proposition; wish, desire; object, intention, aim, purpose, pursuit, motive'. (Platts p.1044)
adaa karnaa : 'To perform; accomplish; fulfil; discharge; liquidate, pay; to effect or accomplish satisfactorily, properly, &c.'. (Platts p.31)
FWP:
SETS == EK; EXCLAMATION; POETRY
MOTIFS == VEIL
NAMES
TERMS == VERSE-SETThe present verse is the second and final one in a verse-set of two verses. Here's the first verse, {1050,18}:
gah sar-gu;zasht un ne farhaad kii nikaalii
majnuu;N kaa gaahe qi.s.sah bai;Thaa kahaa kare hai[sometimes he brought out the narrative of Farhad
sometimes he always sits and tells the story of Majnun]SRF considers the present verse to be a kind of commentary on {1050,7}, which appears twelve verses earlier in this very long ghazal. But Mir himself very explicitly has marked the present verse as a continuation of {1050,18}, the first verse in the verse-set.
When viewed as a close continuation of {1050,18}, the verse has a rather different look, because we know how 'Mir' went about being an aafat-e zamaanah , a notoriously wild and crazy guy-- and also an ((ishq-peshah , a practicer of passion. It seems that what he did was to tell the stories of the legendary lovers Farhad and Majnun. This is a more intriguing piece of information than the relatively simple report that he operated behind a veil. For it sounds as if his 'veil' consisted of Farhad and Majnun and their stories.
In either case, we know that behind the veil he achieves 'all' his purposes. Here of course the giant question mark looms-- what are these purposes? If 'all' of them are achieved, it's only too possible-- since we know how the ghazal world works-- that they do not include attaining the favors of the beloved. But they might include such goals as fame as a storyteller, and the power to make his listeners reflect (admiringly? fearfully?) on the nature of passion, and of course the comparison of his own life to the lives of Farhad and Majnun. We are left to ask ourselves, in what ways-- metaphorical, symbolic, archetypal, even literal-- might 'Mir' have made such 'veiled' but effective literary use of Farhad and Majnun?
Compare Ghalib's famous verses about the indispensability of metaphorical language for having quite different kinds of discussions: