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Sestina Since time’s morning we all have seen the tower In the far corners of each eye— Its shape, its presence, was constant And dark and cold as its steel pillars, Which linked the earth to the aloft As it left its hidden peak among the clouds. How light and fragile seemed those clouds, Yet how strong, as they embraced the pillars Far above the common watcher’s eye As if their undulations were what kept aloft The gray, unmoving tower, The only scaffolds to hold it constant. But nothing in the cosmos is truly constant, And nothing in the earth stays perpetually aloft, Even the pillars Of the groaning tower As the wisps of the clouds Began to pull away from the reach of the tower’s eye. And how it burst, that eye Of the suddenly trembling tower As, from their place aloft The fading clouds Heard a promise of “I have always been constant” From the hoarse vibrations of the mercury pillars. But the wisps could not be persuaded, and the pillars Erupted in a terrible shriek as the clouds Strove to leave the tower With a peaceful message as the constant Jettisons from the tower’s erupting eye Could not remain aloft. Built, shaped, constructed to hold itself aloft, No one considered that the tower could not stay constant Upon the dissipation of those clouds— First fell, screaming, the eye And then the buckled, madly clawing pillars, And so collapsed the tower. And still the tower’s wreckage remains at the edge of our eye, The constant twisting, twitching of the pillars, As they feebly reach to the aloft and the faded strands of the clouds. Villanelle This is the tower’s story, Witnessed by my truthful kin, Such as it was told to me. A desperate pursuit made he After his love, to save him This. Is the tower’s story More than it had seemed to be? What’s about’s seldom within, Such as it was told to me. Even though an elegy, A tale of truth beneath skin This is. The tower’s story Is harsh memento mori For a soul who’s always been— Such as it was told to me. Was such a thing meant to be? Surely, not to have been seen. This is the tower’s story, Such as it was told to me. Sonnet I heard recountings of profound despair, About a man with eye and tongue of brass. The day before, I’d seen his icy stare; The evening next, his story came to pass. How strange, distressing, were those words to hear Of how his love accepted death’s kind call; The screaméd pleas and how he drew her near— Unheard, unseen, his anguish wrings my soul. The image of his twisted countenance Within my mind—his visage turned to red— Invades my every thought. What cruel romance, How he caressed her hands as she lay dead. And how that icy stare seems now to me— What once was brass is naught but mercury. Pantoum He would do all to be with her As he pleaded, Clinging to her arms Like a lost child. And he pleaded, His eyes streaming Like a lost child’s, And told her, “Is my screaming Not enough to stop you?” And, bolder, “I can’t let you go.” “What’s enough to stop you From telling me, ‘I can’t let you know?’” She starkly asked. “You’re telling me What I have never said; Be stark—we basked In trust and love; What have I ever said That burns enough to turn Our trust and love To pain and death?” “The worlds so roughly turn— We could not stop the dread machines Of pain and death As long as we live.” He could not stop the dread machines— Clinging to her arms, How long could he live? He would do all to be with her.
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May 1, 2012
May 1, 2012 at 9:02 PM UTC
May 17th, 1607
Sestina Since time’s morning we all have seen the tower In the far corners of each eye— Its shape, its presence, was constant And dark and cold as its steel pillars, Which linked the earth to the aloft As it left its hidden peak among the clouds. How light and fragile seemed those clouds, Yet how strong, as they embraced the pillars Far above the common watcher’s eye As if their undulations were what kept aloft The gray, unmoving tower, The only scaffolds to hold it constant. But nothing in the cosmos is truly constant, And nothing in the earth stays perpetually aloft, Even the pillars Of the groaning tower As the wisps of the clouds Began to pull away from the reach of the tower’s eye. And how it burst, that eye Of the suddenly trembling tower As, from their place aloft The fading clouds Heard a promise of “I have always been constant” From the hoarse vibrations of the mercury pillars. But the wisps could not be persuaded, and the pillars Erupted in a terrible shriek as the clouds Strove to leave the tower With a peaceful message as the constant Jettisons from the tower’s erupting eye Could not remain aloft. Built, shaped, constructed to hold itself aloft, No one considered that the tower could not stay constant Upon the dissipation of those clouds— First fell, screaming, the eye And then the buckled, madly clawing pillars, And so collapsed the tower. And still the tower’s wreckage remains at the edge of our eye, The constant twisting, twitching of the pillars, As they feebly reach to the aloft and the faded strands of the clouds. Villanelle This is the tower’s story, Witnessed by my truthful kin, Such as it was told to me. A desperate pursuit made he After his love, to save him This. Is the tower’s story More than it had seemed to be? What’s about’s seldom within, Such as it was told to me. Even though an elegy, A tale of truth beneath skin This is. The tower’s story Is harsh memento mori For a soul who’s always been— Such as it was told to me. Was such a thing meant to be? Surely, not to have been seen. This is the tower’s story, Such as it was told to me. Sonnet I heard recountings of profound despair, About a man with eye and tongue of brass. The day before, I’d seen his icy stare; The evening next, his story came to pass. How strange, distressing, were those words to hear Of how his love accepted death’s kind call; The screaméd pleas and how he drew her near— Unheard, unseen, his anguish wrings my soul. The image of his twisted countenance Within my mind—his visage turned to red— Invades my every thought. What cruel romance, How he caressed her hands as she lay dead. And how that icy stare seems now to me— What once was brass is naught but mercury. Pantoum He would do all to be with her As he pleaded, Clinging to her arms Like a lost child. And he pleaded, His eyes streaming Like a lost child’s, And told her, “Is my screaming Not enough to stop you?” And, bolder, “I can’t let you go.” “What’s enough to stop you From telling me, ‘I can’t let you know?’” She starkly asked. “You’re telling me What I have never said; Be stark—we basked In trust and love; What have I ever said That burns enough to turn Our trust and love To pain and death?” “The worlds so roughly turn— We could not stop the dread machines Of pain and death As long as we live.” He could not stop the dread machines— Clinging to her arms, How long could he live? He would do all to be with her.
All four of these poems are written from the perspective of a fictional poet about two other characters of mine. Technically a school assignment, these will be very helpful for the story itself.
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May 1, 2012
May 1, 2012 at 9:02 PM UTC
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