The Serenade (from The Spanish) Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: ABCB CAAA DEFE GHEH IJKJ LAMA ANEN NOPO KAAA FQNR FNNN FNEN KAFA FSPS AACAIf slumber sweet Lisena | A |
Have stolen o'er thine eyes | B |
As night steals o'er the glory | C |
Of spring's transparent skies | B |
- | |
Wake in thy scorn and beauty | C |
And listen to the strain | A |
That murmurs my devotion | A |
That mourns for thy disdain | A |
- | |
Here by thy door at midnight | D |
I pass the dreary hour | E |
With plaintive sounds profaning | F |
The silence of thy bower | E |
- | |
A tale of sorrow cherished | G |
Too fondly to depart | H |
Of wrong from love the flatterer | E |
And my own wayward heart | H |
- | |
Twice o'er this vale the seasons | I |
Have brought and borne away | J |
The January tempest | K |
The genial wind of May | J |
- | |
Yet still my plaint is uttered | L |
My tears and sighs are given | A |
To earth's unconscious waters | M |
And wandering winds of heaven | A |
- | |
I saw from this fair region | A |
The smile of summer pass | N |
And myriad frost stars glitter | E |
Among the russet grass | N |
- | |
While winter seized the streamlets | N |
That fled along the ground | O |
And fast in chains of crystal | P |
The truant murmurers bound | O |
- | |
I saw that to the forest | K |
The nightingales had flown | A |
And every sweet voiced fountain | A |
Had hushed its silver tone | A |
- | |
The maniac winds divorcing | F |
The turtle from his mate | Q |
Raved through the leafy beeches | N |
And left them desolate | R |
- | |
Now May with life and music | F |
The blooming valley fills | N |
And rears her flowery arches | N |
For all the little rills | N |
- | |
The minstrel bird of evening | F |
Comes back on joyous wings | N |
And like the harp's soft murmur | E |
Is heard the gush of springs | N |
- | |
And deep within the forest | K |
Are wedded turtles seen | A |
Their nuptial chambers seeking | F |
Their chambers close and green | A |
- | |
The rugged trees are mingling | F |
Their flowery sprays in love | S |
The ivy climbs the laurel | P |
To clasp the boughs above | S |
- | |
They change but thou Lisena | A |
Art cold while I complain | A |
Why to thy lover only | C |
Should spring return in vain | A |
William Cullen Bryant
(1)
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