A Thermometrical Ballade Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: ABABBCBC ABABBCBC ABABBCBC D BCBC| There's a wind up that licks like a flame | A |
| And the sun is a porthole of hell | B |
| Now evanish prim notions of shame | A |
| And the craving to look rather well | B |
| In pyjamas you're never a swell | B |
| And you've chosen some roomily made | C |
| Oh for ices these pangs to dispel | B |
| It's one hundred and nine in the shade | C |
| - | |
| We have limped in from tennis That game | A |
| I'd as soon with the damned where they dwell | B |
| Stoke a furnace and bathe in the same | A |
| There's no drink human craving to quell | B |
| Not thin chablis nor sweet muscatel | B |
| Never more shall we see I'm afraid | C |
| The cool shallows the pale asphodel | B |
| It's one hundred and nine in the shade | C |
| - | |
| You recline an invertebrate frame | A |
| In the moisture your atoms expel | B |
| 'Gainst the fates very feebly declaim | A |
| All too limp to rise up and rebel | B |
| Action flies and mosquitoes compel | B |
| We make pitiful fight 'gainst the raid | C |
| With a cloying and nauseous smell | B |
| In one hundred and nine in the shade | C |
| - | |
| ENVOY | D |
| - | |
| Here might solids of Hamlet dispel | B |
| Quick the answer to prayer that he prayed | C |
| Human flesh turns to dew 'neath the spell | B |
| Of one hundred and nine in the shade | C |
Edward Dyson
(1)
Poem topics: , Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
Submit Spanish Translation
Submit German Translation
Submit French Translation
About A Thermometrical Ballade
A Thermometrical Ballade is a poem by Edward Dyson. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
Write your comment about A Thermometrical Ballade poem by Edward Dyson
Best Poems of Edward Dyson