Fragment Of Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: AABBCCDDEEFGHHIIJJKK LLJJMMNNOOPJQQRRCSST TUUVVSWW| To night I'll have my friar let me think | A |
| About my room I'll have it in the pink | A |
| It should be rich and sombre and the moon | B |
| Just in its mid life in the midst of June | B |
| Should look thro' four large windows and display | C |
| Clear but for gold fish vases in the way | C |
| Their glassy diamonding on Turkish floor | D |
| The tapers keep aside an hour and more | D |
| To see what else the moon alone can show | E |
| While the night breeze doth softly let us know | E |
| My terrace is well bower'd with oranges | F |
| Upon the floor the dullest spirit sees | G |
| A guitar ribband and a lady's glove | H |
| Beside a crumple leaved tale of love | H |
| A tambour frame with Venus sleeping there | I |
| All finish'd but some ringlets of her hair | I |
| A viol bow strings torn cross wise upon | J |
| A glorious folio of Anacreon | J |
| A skull upon a mat of roses lying | K |
| Ink'd purple with a song concerning dying | K |
| An hour glass on the turn amid the trails | L |
| Of passion flower just in time there sails | L |
| A cloud across the moon the lights bring in | J |
| And see what more my phantasy can win | J |
| It is a gorgeous room but somewhat sad | M |
| The draperies are so as tho' they had | M |
| Been made for Cleopatra's winding sheet | N |
| And opposite the stedfast eye doth meet | N |
| A spacious looking glass upon whose face | O |
| In letters raven sombre you may trace | O |
| Old 'Mene Mene Tekel Upharsin ' | P |
| Greek busts and statuary have ever been | J |
| Held by the finest spirits fitter far | Q |
| Than vase grotesque and Siamesian jar | Q |
| Therefore 'tis sure a want of Attic taste | R |
| That I should rather love a Gothic waste | R |
| Of eyesight on cinque coloured potter's clay | C |
| Than on the marble fairness of old Greece | S |
| My table coverlits of Jason's fleece | S |
| And black Numidian sheep wool should be wrought | T |
| Gold black and heavy from the Lama brought | T |
| My ebon sofas should delicious be | U |
| With down from Leda's cygnet progeny | U |
| My pictures all Salvator's save a few | V |
| Of Titian's portraiture and one though new | V |
| Of Haydon's in its fresh magnificence | S |
| My wine O good 'tis here at my desire | W |
| And I must sit to supper with my friar | W |
John Keats
(1)
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