…the “course,” or “gateway drug,” so called, and will also post a new sonnet today. On what subject and in what style, I cannot tell.
Tag Archives: Sonnet
The Course:
This first round will be
the gradual evolution of one piece only.
I believe I shall showthe same or similar examples
But each one differing in subject matter
In the next short series.
I had originally written the above as the introduction to the first sonnet in the first series, both of which are mentioned above; however my sweetheart has written such a lovely piece–or, more accurately, I took down verbatim the naturally poetic words she quietly uttered when nearly asleep. And for some reason, although I confess I had written it first–that is, before her lovely words I posted–here we have another moment of synchronicity wherein what is the first offering in the series is an answer of sorts. I had originally intended to use a much more tame subject; however I tend toward perversity whether I intend it or not; and as usual, I have gone the other way. In any case, I shall leave my sweetheart’s wonderful words where they are, as I have found that moving things about can have disastrous results for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that wordpress.com’s so called permalinks are… well… not permanent.
In any case the “course material,” if such it can truly be called, is here:
Sonnet IV: Watchers
Then in beauty and truth, the believers,
Lo!… Shall behold as you conjurers burn.
Though our innocence used as a weakness,
Still… in the end it has helped us prevail;
Although twisted to apathy’s bleakness,
‘Til… we invited your jealous betrayal.
But the Knights of the Copybook Headings
Show… that our apathy caused you to win;
We will never forget that beheadings,
Though… were the wages of this kind of sin.
That you dogs had your day, none may qualm. It’s
Sure… but they’ve chased you back into the mire;
So, return to your pestilent vomit,
Or… we will cast you back into the fire.
This sonnet is part of a short sequence; click here to read it all:
Sonnet III: Builders
So we live in a world that is better
Thus… and we live as all men ought to be.
It was done without deigning to fetter
Us… They have done it by setting us free.
And while man, a creator of beauty
Will… be compensed that his beauty may bloom;
But, the man who makes ugliness duty
Still… gains employment (by pushing a broom.)
And a man who will strive to build greatness,
Too… Shall be striven his greatness to build.
While his ugliness, failure, and hate, thus,
Who… shall be swept into labour, unskilled.
Run in fear! All is lost! You deceivers!
Know… The Romance, of these Knights, does return!
This sonnet is part of a short sequence; click here to read it all:
I do not have…
…writer’s block, nor stage fright, for that matter. I am not quite sure why that is, but still, sometimes it is difficult to bring myself to keep to my schedule. Particularly now. I know I could, for example use one of my developed techniques to write several sonnets in the next hour or two; but I can already tell, I am not going to. I think tomorrow, I will do so.
Lately, I think I have have written a series of more serious and more heartfelt sonnets, and these do not necessarily need to be the norm. When I started this project, I made a joke about not writing sonnets about trivial matters, still, there is something between writing about one’s sunburn during one’s vacation (in Majorca, I have always maintained) and writing a nice-sounding sonnet about a less trivial but still not a soul deafeningly deep matter. I thought nothing of doing this at first, as I mentioned. Still, I think I have been having what a dear friend of mine would call “a case of the blues.” And I am disinclined to write about this case for the reason above.
Sometimes one gets to a point where one does not wish to delve. I am after all, more–much more–a musician than a writer of any kind. And even though music is more difficult than writing–as is practically every field of human endeavour–in the grand scheme of things, music comes rather more easy to me than writing. So to compose a sonnet that sounds nice the subject of which is rather vague or even cryptic, is not a difficult thing to accomplish. Still I do feel much better now that I “verbalise” this fact.
I can write, perhaps because of whatever musical, or one might say: “sound related senses,” I may posses, something rather quickly. Some of these sonnets have ended up being quite nice to my ears; and, as often happens in such a case, capriciousness gives way to depth as one writes, arranges, and rearranges words in such an endeavour. Sometimes of course the result may… sound better than it means, or sound more clearly than its meaning is clear. Still, more often than not, perhaps, these are nearly indistinguishable from those into which I invest quite a lot of thought and emotion and research of one kind or another.
Quite often, a very deeply held feeling can also roll off the pen, even when one is using a particularly difficult form. Although my general “policy,” as it were, has always been to let the text dictate the best form to use. I have very many to chose from, in sonnet writing. When one realises there are:
- Shakespearean (abab,cdcd,efef,gg)
- Reverse Shakespearean (aa, bcbc, dede, fgfg)
- Interlocking Shakespearean (abab, cdcd, dede, fg — fg abab, cdcd, efef)
- Italian (1221, 1221, 6*{AB} | {ABC} (six final lines of two or three ephemerals which can vary in almost any combination))
- Reverse Italian: 1221, 2112, AA 4* {BA} | {BC} (two or three rhymes but beginning with a couplet.
- Spenserian (a1a1, 1212, 2323, bb)
- Reverse Spenserian (2121, 3232, 4343, [14][14]) one of my favourites.
- Emeronian (a1a2, b1b2, c1c2, [d1][d2])
- Reverse Emeronian (1a2a, 1b2b, 1c2c, [1d][2d]) another favourite.
- Sequential (1234, 1234, 1234, [12][34]) another invention
- unnamed (aa1a, bb1b, cc1c, [1d][1d])
- Canopian ([a-a]c[b-b]c, [d-d]f[e-e]f, [g-g]1[h-h]1, [j-j]1) extrapolation from “Roddenberry’s Couplet.”
- Unlucky ( ????????????? )
It is easy to conceive of the appropriate form to use given the idea one wishes to express. So I must now pledge to continue in this way tomorrow wherein It may be easier to accomplish after some rest. : )
Sonnet II: Custodians
But they managed their deeds without casting
Down… as you wretched will usually try.
They have made exaltation their duty;
Men… they shall cleanse of your odious taint.
They have filled our museums with beauty,
Then… they discarded your splatters of paint.
They have tossed out your volumes of garble,
Not… fit for lining the cage of a skunk.
They’ve exalted our beauty in marble
Wrought… when they crushed all your piles of junk.
And your music and verse is forgotten
Guff… with its horrible discordant clash.
They’ve divested the Earth of that rotten
Stuff… when they threw out the rest of the trash.
This sonnet is part of a short sequence; click here to read it all:
My first…
…I am afraid I am not sure what to call the phenomenon. I think I shall leave it to the reader to decide what “this” is; but I have learned thence that a rabbit hole only becomes deeper if one tries to remove it by digging. I did not generally think the comment box was the best place for a such as this, but It would have been just fine if I had realised a bit earlier and not encouraged all this:
The general advice here keeping with the above analogy is:
Do not feed the rabbits; they will only dig faster.