HOW facile 't is to frame the sonnet! See: An "apt alliteration" at the start; Phrase fanciful, turned t'other-end-to with art; And then a rhyme makes first and fourth agree. Ee words enough -- so this next quatrain we Will therefore rhyme to match. Here sometimes "heart" Comes in, as "hot" or "throbbing" to impart A tang of sentiment to our idee. Then the sextette, wherein there strictly ought To be a kind of winding up of things; Only two rhymes (to have it nicely wrought) On which it settles, lark-like, as it sings. And so 't is perfect, head and tail and wings. "Lacks something?" Oh, as usual, but a thought. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A DISAPPOINTMENT by JOANNA BAILLIE ON THE DEATH OF JAZZ by JOHN KENDRICK BANGS THE IMPROVISATORE: THE INDUCTION TO THE FIRST FYTTE by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES WISCONSIN by CORA BLAKESLEE BEEBE THE STEPS OF THE COMMANDER by ALEXANDER (ALEKSANDR) ALEXANDROVICH BLOK JACINTHS AND JESSAMINES by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT TO MY DOG, JOWLER by JONATHAN DORR BRADLEY |