Reply To Some Verses Of J. M. B. Pigot, Esq., On The Cruelty Of His Mistress Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis

Rhyme Scheme: AABCCB DEBFFB GGBBBB AABCCB BBBHIB JJBKKB CCBLLB BBBBBB

Why Pigot complainA
Of this damsel's disdainA
Why thus in despair do you fretB
For months you may tryC
Yet believe me a sighC
Will never obtain a coquetteB
-
Would you teach her to loveD
For a time seem to roveE
At first she may frown in a petB
But leave her awhileF
She shortly will smileF
And then you may kiss your coquetteB
-
For such are the airsG
Of these fanciful fairsG
They think all our homage a debtB
Yet a partial neglectB
Soon takes an effectB
And humbles the proudest coquetteB
-
Dissemble your painA
And lengthen your chainA
And seem her hauteur to regretB
If again you shall sighC
She no more will denyC
That yours is the rosy coquetteB
-
If still from false prideB
Your pangs she derideB
This whimsical virgin forgetB
Some other admireH
Who will melt with your fireI
And laugh at the little coquetteB
-
For me I adoreJ
Some twenty or moreJ
And love them most dearly but yetB
Though my heart they enthralK
I'd abandon them allK
Did they act like your blooming coquetteB
-
No longer repineC
Adopt this designC
And break through her slight woven netB
Away with despairL
No longer forbearL
To fly from the captious coquetteB
-
Then quit her my friendB
Your bosom defendB
Ere quite with her snares you're besetB
Lest your deep wounded heartB
When incens'd by the smartB
Should lead you to curse the coquetteB

George Gordon Lord Byron



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