Beethoven At The Piano Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: A AABB CCAA AAAA D EEAA D FFDD D BBAA D GGHI D DJGG G GGAA G BBBB| Beethoven At The Piano | A |
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| I | - |
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| See where Beethoven sits alone a dream of days elysian | A |
| A crownless king upon a throne reflected in a vision | A |
| The man who strikes the potent chords which make the world in wonder | B |
| Acknowledge him though poor and dim the mouthpiece of the thunder | B |
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| II | - |
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| He feels the music of the skies the while his heart is breaking | C |
| He sings the songs of Paradise where love has no forsaking | C |
| And though so deaf he cannot hear the tempest as a token | A |
| He makes the music of his mind the grandest ever spoken | A |
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| III | - |
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| He doth not hear the whispered word of love in his seclusion | A |
| Or voice of friend or song of bird in Nature's sad confusion | A |
| But he hath made for Love's sweet sake so wild a declamation | A |
| That all true lovers of the earth have claim'd him of their nation | A |
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| IV | D |
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| He had a Juliet in his youth as Romeo had before him | E |
| And Romeo like he sought to die that she might then adore him | E |
| But she was weak as women are whose faith has not been proven | A |
| And would not change her name for his Guiciardi for Beethoven | A |
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| V | D |
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| O minstrel whom a maiden spurned but whom a world has treasured | F |
| O sovereign of a greater realm than man has ever measured | F |
| Thou hast not lost the lips of love but thou hast gain'd in glory | D |
| The love of all who know the thrall of thine immortal story | D |
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| VI | D |
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| Thou art the bard whom none discard but whom all men discover | B |
| To be a god as Orpheus was albeit a lonely lover | B |
| A king to call the stones to life beside the roaring ocean | A |
| And bid the stars discourse to trees in words of man's emotion | A |
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| VII | D |
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| A king of joys a prince of tears an emperor of the seasons | G |
| Whose songs are like the sway of years in Love's immortal reasons | G |
| A bard who knows no life but this to love and be rejected | H |
| And reproduce in earthly strains the prayers of the elected | I |
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| VIII | D |
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| O poet heart O seraph soul by men and maids ador d | D |
| O Titan with the lion's mane and with the splendid forehead | J |
| We men who bow to thee in grief must tremble in our gladness | G |
| To know what tears were turned to pearls to crown thee in thy sadness | G |
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| IX | G |
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| An Angel by direct descent a German by alliance | G |
| Thou didst intone the wonder chords which made Despair a science | G |
| Yea thou didst strike so grand a note that in its large vibration | A |
| It seemed the roaring of the sea in nature's jubilation | A |
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| X | G |
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| O Sire of Song Sonata King Sublime and loving master | B |
| The sweetest soul that ever struck an octave in disaster | B |
| In thee were found the fires of thought the splendours of endeavour | B |
| And thou shalt sway the minds of men for ever and for ever | B |
Eric Mackay
(1)
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About Beethoven At The Piano
Beethoven At The Piano is a poem by Eric Mackay. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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