The Sea Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: ABAB CBCB DBDB EBEB FBFB GBGB HIHB JBJB KBKB ABAB LBLB IBIBThere are certain things a spider a ghost | A |
The income tax gout an umbrella for three | B |
That I hate but the thing that I hate the most | A |
Is a thing they call the SEA | B |
- | |
Pour some salt water over the floor | C |
Ugly I'm sure you'll allow it to be | B |
Suppose it extended a mile or more | C |
That's very like the SEA | B |
- | |
Beat a dog till it howls outright | D |
Cruel but all very well for a spree | B |
Suppose that one did so day and night | D |
That would be like the SEA | B |
- | |
I had a vision of nursery maids | E |
Tens of thousands passed by me | B |
All leading children with wooden spades | E |
And this was by the SEA | B |
- | |
Who invented those spades of wood | F |
Who was it cut them out of the tree | B |
None I think but an idiot could | F |
Or one that loved the SEA | B |
- | |
It is pleasant and dreamy no doubt to float | G |
With thoughts as boundless and souls as free' | B |
But suppose you are very unwell in a boat | G |
How do you like the SEA | B |
- | |
There is an insect that people avoid | H |
Whence is derived the verb to flee' | I |
Where have you been by it most annoyed | H |
In lodgings by the SEA | B |
- | |
If you like coffee with sand for dregs | J |
A decided hint of salt in your tea | B |
And a fishy taste in the very eggs | J |
By all means choose the SEA | B |
- | |
And if with these dainties to drink and eat | K |
You prefer not a vestige of grass or tree | B |
And a chronic state of wet in your feet | K |
Then I recommend the SEA | B |
- | |
For I have friends who dwell by the coast | A |
Pleasant friends they are to me | B |
It is when I'm with them I wonder most | A |
That anyone likes the SEA | B |
- | |
They take me a walk though tired and stiff | L |
To climb the heights I madly agree | B |
And after a tumble or so from the cliff | L |
They kindly suggest the SEA | B |
- | |
I try the rocks and I think it cool | I |
That they laugh with such an excess of glee | B |
As I heavily slip into every pool | I |
That skirts the cold cold SEA | B |
Lewis Carroll
(3)
Poem topics: , Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
Submit Spanish Translation
Submit German Translation
Submit French Translation
Write your comment about The Sea poem by Lewis Carroll
Best Poems of Lewis Carroll