A Little Ghazal
We met last year in the lonely library lot;
it was early Covid times and we knew so little
but Roberta wanted eggs; I had them to sell.
Awkward it was, no thought of masks—those little
things that tip weighty scales. So we exchanged:
envelope hidden in a tissue, wry little
smile, the hope we wouldn’t get sick. At two arms’
lengths, eggs slipped from me to her. In time, little
losses grew bigger, smiles disappeared behind
masks or into loneliness lifted only by little
framed faces on screens. After a year and two
shots—mask and vaccine record in tow—a little
awkward still, Nancy chances a party. Finds Roberta!
We hug, talk, laugh—pleasures no longer so little.
13 thoughts on "A Little Ghazal"
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
I am so pleased by this poem. Not only is it timely, it’s carefully crafted. It tips toward the positive and I thank you for that. Very well done!
Lovely poem. Made me smile. Thank you.
I love how you used this form so skillfully–I really enjoyed this.
Yes you skillfully wrote a very relevant ghazal! Kudos!
Ah, “little” the word for a ghazal! Nice.
Nancy – So beautifully crafted and story told! And you even got the name in the end, which is often hard to do! Nancy has every reason to party!!
lovely ghazal, so deft!
nicely arranged-thanks for your insight and poetry this month! gonna need that lemon pie recipe…
How I love the ghazal, Nancy. You draw this one so well! Good choice with little…so much in that little!
Well done, Nancy. I’ve enjoyed your writing!
What a range in your writing this month, Nancy. Here, I love that you elevate a “little” word. The ghazal form lets the story unfold. Nice work!
I was so unaware of the form. I’m pretty sure that means you did it very well. 🙂 Thanks for this poem. And thanks for making me a small part of the beauty.
Nancy, what an excellent poem. Thanks for writing and reading and commenting.