GHAZAL 
By Amelia and Aisha 
Meaning of Ghazal; In Middle Eastern and Indian literature and music. A lyric, poem 
with a fixed number of verses and a repeated rhyme, typically on the theme of love, 
and normally set to music.
Content 
• Ghazal is a love poem where a speaker seeks to gain the love & attention of 
something else. The details of the poem are unclear. The poem comes across 
that the feelings of the speaker are not the same for the object they love. 
(Language) 
• In each stanza a new image occurs or more images of their love are created 
e.g. “arrow flies, the heart is pierced, tattoo me.” and “the serpents tail, 
charmer”. 
• At the end of each couplet there is the use of rhyming words e.g. “Blow 
though me. Then woo me.” 
• At the beginning of each line it begins with “If I am” and throughout the poem 
the lines begin with “If I”.
Language 
• At the start of the poem it uses two metaphors “If I am the grass” and “you the 
breeze” this use of metaphors is a way for the writer to express her feelings of love 
towards the object. 
• Also she writes about there love being a natural thing e.g. “Venomous tongue, the 
serpent’s tail, charmer, use your charm, weave a spell and subdued me.” and 
how she is an animal and not tame. She wants to be charmed like a snake. 
• Furthermore the writer talks about “If I rise in the east as you die in the west, 
every night renew me.” this shows us that their love will always be there and they 
will love each other the same way, always.
Image 
•The imagery used in the poem is expressed through the use of metaphors, that contain 
images of nature. 
•The use of natural imagery, “grass” and “breeze” suggests that love is natural, perfect, 
simple, tranquil, sweet and open. 
•'Ghazal takes both Eastern images of the marketplace, “the sun in bazaars”, and 
Western country rivers, “one glimpse of a chine”, and blends them to create an idyllic 
sense of home.
Structure 
•The poem doesn’t have an actual title, “Ghazal” is the name of a specific type of poem. 
•The two lines of the couplets do not rhyme but the end of each couplet does, partly 
through the repetition of the word "me". 
•Each stanza is separate from the rest, so we get lots of different images and ideas. This 
makes this poem appear playful but also quite intense. 
•The last word in each stanza is the same (at least in sound). 
•Also the penultimate word in each stanza rhymes. 
•Couplets show single thoughts, separate idea/image in each stanza gives the reader lots 
of thoughts in quick succession making the poem very intense (like the speaker’s feelings). 
•Ghazal often has the poet’s name in the last stanza (“twice the me” = 2 x me = 
meme/Mimi). 
•The enjambment makes it sound like the poet is waiting (line 3). 
(Enjambment means; the continuation of a sentence without a pause beyond the end of a line, couplet, 
or stanza).
Meaning 
• It is about wooing a lover, trying to convince the them of the joys, and good of a 
relationship. 
• Also Ghazal focuses on a whole relationship, and how they feel about each 
other and how well their personalities match. 
• Finally Ghazal mentions about how without the love of another they will be 
worthless e.g. “I am, if only half the world you are to me”.
Ghazal by Mimi Khalvati 
If I am the grass and you the breeze, blow 
through me. 
If I am the rose and you the bird, then woo 
me. 
If you are the rhyme and I the refrain, don’t 
hang on my lips, come and I’ll come too 
when you cue me. 
If yours is the iron fist in the velvet glove 
when the arrow flies, the heart is pierced, 
tattoo me. 
If mine is the venomous tongue, the 
serpent’s tail, charmer, use your charm, 
weave a spell and subdue me. 
If I am the laurel leaf in your crown, you are 
the arms around my bark, arms that never 
knew me. 
Oh would that I were bark! So old and still 
in leaf. 
And you, dropping in my shade, dew to 
bedew me! 
What shape should I take to marry your 
own, have you – hawk to my shadow, 
moth to my flame – pursue me? 
If I rise in the east as you die in the west, 
die for my sake, my love, every night 
renew me. 
If, when it ends, we are just good friends, 
be my Friend, muse, lover and guide, 
Shamsuddin to my Rumi. 
Be heaven and earth to me and I’ll be 
twice the me 
I am, if only half the world you are to me.

Ghazal

  • 1.
    GHAZAL By Ameliaand Aisha Meaning of Ghazal; In Middle Eastern and Indian literature and music. A lyric, poem with a fixed number of verses and a repeated rhyme, typically on the theme of love, and normally set to music.
  • 2.
    Content • Ghazalis a love poem where a speaker seeks to gain the love & attention of something else. The details of the poem are unclear. The poem comes across that the feelings of the speaker are not the same for the object they love. (Language) • In each stanza a new image occurs or more images of their love are created e.g. “arrow flies, the heart is pierced, tattoo me.” and “the serpents tail, charmer”. • At the end of each couplet there is the use of rhyming words e.g. “Blow though me. Then woo me.” • At the beginning of each line it begins with “If I am” and throughout the poem the lines begin with “If I”.
  • 3.
    Language • Atthe start of the poem it uses two metaphors “If I am the grass” and “you the breeze” this use of metaphors is a way for the writer to express her feelings of love towards the object. • Also she writes about there love being a natural thing e.g. “Venomous tongue, the serpent’s tail, charmer, use your charm, weave a spell and subdued me.” and how she is an animal and not tame. She wants to be charmed like a snake. • Furthermore the writer talks about “If I rise in the east as you die in the west, every night renew me.” this shows us that their love will always be there and they will love each other the same way, always.
  • 4.
    Image •The imageryused in the poem is expressed through the use of metaphors, that contain images of nature. •The use of natural imagery, “grass” and “breeze” suggests that love is natural, perfect, simple, tranquil, sweet and open. •'Ghazal takes both Eastern images of the marketplace, “the sun in bazaars”, and Western country rivers, “one glimpse of a chine”, and blends them to create an idyllic sense of home.
  • 5.
    Structure •The poemdoesn’t have an actual title, “Ghazal” is the name of a specific type of poem. •The two lines of the couplets do not rhyme but the end of each couplet does, partly through the repetition of the word "me". •Each stanza is separate from the rest, so we get lots of different images and ideas. This makes this poem appear playful but also quite intense. •The last word in each stanza is the same (at least in sound). •Also the penultimate word in each stanza rhymes. •Couplets show single thoughts, separate idea/image in each stanza gives the reader lots of thoughts in quick succession making the poem very intense (like the speaker’s feelings). •Ghazal often has the poet’s name in the last stanza (“twice the me” = 2 x me = meme/Mimi). •The enjambment makes it sound like the poet is waiting (line 3). (Enjambment means; the continuation of a sentence without a pause beyond the end of a line, couplet, or stanza).
  • 6.
    Meaning • Itis about wooing a lover, trying to convince the them of the joys, and good of a relationship. • Also Ghazal focuses on a whole relationship, and how they feel about each other and how well their personalities match. • Finally Ghazal mentions about how without the love of another they will be worthless e.g. “I am, if only half the world you are to me”.
  • 7.
    Ghazal by MimiKhalvati If I am the grass and you the breeze, blow through me. If I am the rose and you the bird, then woo me. If you are the rhyme and I the refrain, don’t hang on my lips, come and I’ll come too when you cue me. If yours is the iron fist in the velvet glove when the arrow flies, the heart is pierced, tattoo me. If mine is the venomous tongue, the serpent’s tail, charmer, use your charm, weave a spell and subdue me. If I am the laurel leaf in your crown, you are the arms around my bark, arms that never knew me. Oh would that I were bark! So old and still in leaf. And you, dropping in my shade, dew to bedew me! What shape should I take to marry your own, have you – hawk to my shadow, moth to my flame – pursue me? If I rise in the east as you die in the west, die for my sake, my love, every night renew me. If, when it ends, we are just good friends, be my Friend, muse, lover and guide, Shamsuddin to my Rumi. Be heaven and earth to me and I’ll be twice the me I am, if only half the world you are to me.