Withal accountable I’ll always find
Wherever you may drift or even fly;
Although forbade to enter shadowlands.
Tag Archives: Muse
Sonnet VII: Mercy into Dreams
Dive deep, shall I, in dreams, thy waves conceal;
So deeper hath thy fortunes still unmet,
That once combined, fear not, that once complete,
To me shall speak completeness redefined.
Should every fortune hunter so reveal
Such bounty; though thou keepest him beset?
Yet sleet nor snow nor ice shall once defeat
His voyage to complete; nor that combined,
His efforts shall in any way appeal
To mercy, nor his fever to abet.
Within thy depths, marks danger, not deceit….
But wake thyself my love, be still thy mind;
This dream were not but real–this silhouette–
Let not this ghost-ship treat thee so unkind.
This sonnet is part of a short sequence; click here to read it all:
Intro 7: Dreamwatch
To calm thy dreaming
So do I simply let thee
Dream whilst I watch thee.
Sonnet V: All About Me
Again, doth stir in pretty slumber so,
But slight, her waking; dreameth then of he
Whose bearing and whose presence seemed unique.
And he, of small advantage, seemed as wise;
Yet hardly did aware, he seem, nor know;
Was more, that either view, than blind decree.
About him still, so more than just mystique;
Yet not conceit, as others she’d surmise.
And of his expertise, might nothing show;
Unless such confidence she chanced to see.
And might she little know of such technique,
Unless through conversation might surprise.
Though not precisely modest, I’d agree,
My love wouldst speak my greatness (most unwise!)
This sonnet is part of a short sequence; click here to read it all:
Follow-Up on Teaching Sonnets | Wanderings in the Labyrinth
Sonnet: Favourites
I set myself this task and then I’m free
To fly abroad to anywhere I choose;
With confidence, assisting in my prime
Companions’ search with nothing I might lose.
They might or mightn’t choose to let me be;
Though never doth their circumstance confuse
My only wish as yearns to take this time,
That this, a burden is, to disabuse.
And clearly, doth my love, to this degree,
Encompass all their lives, and to suffuse
Complex, with all its mystery, this crime
With eager resolution. Know I whose
Bleak life shall see enrichment that ensues?
‘Tis mine, so lifted, by this double muse.
Sonnet: Stardate – 50419.1…
My love has wings–slender, feathered things–
With grace in upswept curve and tapered tip,
My love would soar–swiftly to adore–
So twisting ever toward, and graceful skip.
So dances she–round and round to be–
Enrapt to bring us care, to bind us kept,
My love should know–you, my love, bestow–
Your Own, as did He dance and graceful stepped.
For now as wed… They–Our Love has said–
Would bear us swiftly hence as spectral ships;
So lovely They–So lighted, Their display–
That would illuminate our Earthly trips.
And lovely see–you and I–as We…
Take flight, as when I tasted first your lips.
- once more for Gene.
I am at a loss to explain why you eschew iambic pentameter in your form exercise, as you say, “even if the poem makes no sense.” Although “One thing at a time” might be a guess at your answer–which certainly would make a degree of sense. Still the iambic rhythm is most definitely a thing to get ones head around.
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