Poetry with simple rhyme scheme isn't really poetry at all. It takes all the artistry of language, and crushes their greatness into something rather small.
It belittles the sharp peaks of your smile, that peek through porcelain veils. It takes the beauty of your eyes, and brings them down to scale.
The rhyming ruins all seriousness, true poets take in pride, it leaves their work in ridicule, though their emotions are implied.
It vastly understates the warmth in your cheeks, and incredibly discounts the lions of your dreams, making them seem weak.
That is why I will never write a poem describing the perfection of you in a silly little rhyme scheme; that is what I shall not do.
I will, however, jest at what rhyming cannot describe, although it tries to do its best, it falls by the wayside,
For limericks cannot contain my pretentious heart and soul, and cannot compare to the magnificence you hold.
Because if I could contain your spirit, in matters of stanzas and rhyme my talents would be wasted, this atrocity a crime,
But you make my writing worthwhile, and give me ideas to muse, instead of the dull and dread, the pretender's butter and bread, with none of my talents to use.