Fair Rosamond Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: ABCD EFEF CECE EEGG HGIG HECE GCHC ECJC KLGL JEJE HGJG EMEM GECE GGNG GEJE OEEE| You've heard of King Henry II | A |
| And the story of how he got fond | B |
| Of one of his customer's daughters | C |
| A lass called the Fair Rosamond | D |
| - | |
| 'Twere a lovely romance while it lasted | E |
| The course of true love ran serene | F |
| Till some nosey parkering varlet | E |
| Started carrying tales to the Queen | F |
| - | |
| The Queen were at first incred u lous | C |
| She said What a tale to invent | E |
| The King would not stoop to such baseness | C |
| At any rate not during Lent | E |
| - | |
| But one morning she picked up a doublet | E |
| As he'd dropped on his bedroom settee | E |
| It had three golden hairs on the shoulder | G |
| And a strong smell of 'Soir de Paree | G |
| - | |
| She went to the King in a passion | H |
| And showed him this evidence clear | G |
| And swore by her distaff and wimple | I |
| That she weren't having none of that theer | G |
| - | |
| She said If I catch that young woman | H |
| She'll leave no more hairs on your coat | E |
| Her trying to pinch other folks' monarchs | C |
| I'll give her a swim in the moat | E |
| - | |
| So he took Rosie off to the country | G |
| To an old fashioned manor of his | C |
| With an 'ampton Court Maze in the garden | H |
| As he kept for occasions like this | C |
| - | |
| But the Queen wasn't fooled for a moment | E |
| She knew all about Henry's ways | C |
| She slipped off herself the next morning | J |
| And secretly watched that there maze | C |
| - | |
| She were hiding in t 'macaracapa | K |
| When Rosie came out for the milk | L |
| And she fixed to her dress as she passed her | G |
| The end of a bobbin of silk | L |
| - | |
| Poor Rosie went back not suspecting | J |
| The trail she were leaving behind | E |
| And the Queen slowly followed her gloating | J |
| At what she expected to find | E |
| - | |
| The King he were toasting a muffin | H |
| And Rosie were wetting the tea | G |
| When in walked the Queen her face shining | J |
| With a look of malevolent glee | G |
| - | |
| She'd a basin of poison in one hand | E |
| In the other a glittering knife | M |
| The King kind of goggled a moment | E |
| Then turned and said Rose meet the wife | M |
| - | |
| The Queen shoved the basin at Rosie | G |
| And held the knife out by its point | E |
| It were plain she had no' but two choices | C |
| The soup or a cut off the joint | E |
| - | |
| The Fair Rosamond begged for mercy | G |
| She said What you've heard is not true | G |
| Our friendship were purely platonic | N |
| A yarn which in them days was new | G |
| - | |
| The King told the same tale as Rosie | G |
| And if that's not the truth Queen he cried | E |
| May I die on this spot where I'm standing | J |
| As he said it he skipped to one side | E |
| - | |
| The Queen at the finish believed them | O |
| But to save further messing around | E |
| She packed Rosie off to a Convent | E |
| And had the maze burnt to the ground | E |
Marriott Edgar
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