When I was young at heart and full of play,
while skipping by the lake, I saw a swan
and dreamt of magic nights to come:
love had blossomed, and we had found our way.
Most youngsters shrug off instants of sad fate,
laugh at signs, enjoyment brash and true;
I missed the precious lane that led to you
and fancied cherished love would ever wait.
Sylphine chants inform my soul anew
and trace a broken heart with starry dew
on pathways - in a trance, while hope renews.
Today I lie beside the violet lake;
Adrift, enchanted, in my white swan’s wake.
Faith will not reverse this lonesome state.
Comments
Hi Grace
make yourself into a drummer. read your poem aloud using only the accents, just do Ba-bah, -ba-bah, -ba-bah bah bha or whatever sound you like and hear the beat, the pace, the metre. It doesn't matter that you know the names of the meters, nor do the meters have to be the same, they just have to fit somehow,
You will find a few small areas where you have to force a drum beat- like:
Today I lie beside the violet lake; (Da DAH da DAH da DAH da DAH da DAH (Iamabic pentameter)
I drift, enchanted, in my white swan’s wake. Da DAH, DAH DAH DAH (enchanted) to da da-da da-da da
Faith will not reverse this lonesome state. (like first line)
the word "enchanted " has three accents, and changes the flow of metre. Hope you can decipher the above, or hear what I mean. Its very hard to explain when not using half notes, quarter notes or rests, like in written music. But try the drum thing. read the poem in accents or stresses.
In English, stresses vary often by the reader. so go with your gut feeling. what fits for you fits.
Your rhyme scheme is very nicely done, ABBA/ABBA/AAA/AAA. Using repeated rhymes at the end help build the pace of poem in a nicely crafted piece. Like many poems it waits for the very last line to throw the whole narrative into another direction. Faith. I don't know Sylphine. Not sure I'm getting the ultimate intent of the last line, faith allusively goes to divinity.
Maybe i'm missing some connections...
Thank you so much, Eumolpus.
Thank you so much, Eumolpus. I'll try the drummer tactic. Yes, US and Britain's English vary a great deal, it even depends on the region. I find I barely understand how they speak it in Liverpool! I'll go over my poem using your suggestions. It's still in the raw stage, perhaps it always will be...
Tx again, best, Gracy
Hi again, Eumolpus. I went
Hi again, Eumolpus. I went over to your profile and read the article provided by your link. Highly interesting about having a base topic, such as in "triggering towns". Now I understand perfectly. Tx for that. We learn a lot here at neopoet.
I'll be doing my homework!
Gracy
I just love that third stanza nicely done
Dear lynn, thank you, I work
Dear lynn, thank you, I work hard with sonnets but never get them quite right. I have to fix the meter, as Eumolpus has shown me.
All the best, Gracy
Hi Gracy
I am not too familiar with structured poems and types of meters so can't comment on the structure.. but to me your poem has a wonderful feel...and emits soft emotions...taking the reader to that lake and see the swan floating so gently which is soothing..
be well...
.
Thank you so much, dear Teddy
Thank you so much, dear Teddy. I love the examples you've provided me with. It's OK to count syllables, it's a start, but not necessarily makes for good metre. Some sonnets end with the two lines you've shown in the second one, others with 3+3. The length of the verses also varies, one can have 8, 11, 14.
So I have much homework to do, you're all being such good teachers and I'm ashamed of not working on your advice. Will do.
Have you posted your sonnet here? I'll look up your works.
Tx so much for your help, dear Teddy. Gracy
Sonnets are a difficult cup of tea--- but not for me sonnets are
My late mentor from Hudson River
tried her best to teach me
sonnetry
But was beyond me
syllables I don't relish
but a sonnet is
3 paras 4lines each
and 4th two lines only
like
abab cdcd efef gg==14 lines
for syllables ask
EUMO please
Hello lovedly, Eumo has
Hello lovedly, Eumo has already given me excellent advice. Sonnets vary from country to country. Some have only 8 syllables, but most have 11 or 14.
Still, syllable counting doesn't always work for the meter, it's a good start.
Tx so much for visiting, best, Gracy
Dear Teddy, thanks so much.
Dear Teddy, thanks so much. Sounds about right, I'll have a look at my poem right now. It takes me years to get sonnets well written, as I believe you said above.
Best, Gracy
Dear Emou, I have revised my
Dear Emou, I have revised my sonnet Signs. Perhaps you can take another look to see what's still askew.
Tx so much, all of you, for the trouble you've taken to help me.
Best, Gracy