Damon V. Pythias Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: ABAB CACA DEDE AFAF AGAG HAIA JKJK LMLM FAFA NANA OAOA PQPQ RSRS AAAA HTIT IGIG UTUT VHWH LBLB AXAX| Two better friends you wouldn't pass | A |
| Throughout a summer's day | B |
| Than DAMON and his PYTHIAS | A |
| Two merchant princes they | B |
| - | |
| At school together they contrived | C |
| All sorts of boyish larks | A |
| And later on together thrived | C |
| As merry merchants' clerks | A |
| - | |
| And then when many years had flown | D |
| They rose together till | E |
| They bought a business of their own | D |
| And they conduct it still | E |
| - | |
| They loved each other all their lives | A |
| Dissent they never knew | F |
| And stranger still their very wives | A |
| Were rather friendly too | F |
| - | |
| Perhaps you think to serve my ends | A |
| These statements I refute | G |
| When I admit that these dear friends | A |
| Were parties to a suit | G |
| - | |
| But 'twas a friendly action for | H |
| Good PYTHIAS as you see | A |
| Fought merely as executor | I |
| And DAMON as trustee | A |
| - | |
| They laughed to think as through the throng | J |
| Of suitors sad they passed | K |
| That they who'd lived and loved so long | J |
| Should go to law at last | K |
| - | |
| The junior briefs they kindly let | L |
| Two sucking counsel hold | M |
| These learned persons never yet | L |
| Had fingered suitors' gold | M |
| - | |
| But though the happy suitors two | F |
| Were friendly as could be | A |
| Not so the junior counsel who | F |
| Were earning maiden fee | A |
| - | |
| They too till then were friends At school | N |
| They'd done each other's sums | A |
| And under Oxford's gentle rule | N |
| Had been the closest chums | A |
| - | |
| But now they met with scowl and grin | O |
| In every public place | A |
| And often snapped their fingers in | O |
| Each other's learned face | A |
| - | |
| It almost ended in a fight | P |
| When they on path or stair | Q |
| Met face to face They made it quite | P |
| A personal affair | Q |
| - | |
| And when at length the case was called | R |
| It came on rather late | S |
| Spectators really were appalled | R |
| To see their deadly hate | S |
| - | |
| One junior rose with eyeballs tense | A |
| And swollen frontal veins | A |
| To all his powers of eloquence | A |
| He gave the fullest reins | A |
| - | |
| His argument was novel for | H |
| A verdict he relied | T |
| On blackening the junior | I |
| Upon the other side | T |
| - | |
| Oh said the Judge in robe and fur | I |
| The matter in dispute | G |
| To arbitration pray refer | I |
| This is a friendly suit | G |
| - | |
| And PYTHIAS in merry mood | U |
| Digged DAMON in the side | T |
| And DAMON tickled with the feud | U |
| With other digs replied | T |
| - | |
| But oh those deadly counsel twain | V |
| Who were such friends before | H |
| Were never reconciled again | W |
| They quarrelled more and more | H |
| - | |
| At length it happened that they met | L |
| On Alpine heights one day | B |
| And thus they paid each one his debt | L |
| Their fury had its way | B |
| - | |
| They seized each other in a trice | A |
| With scorn and hatred filled | X |
| And falling from a precipice | A |
| They both of them were killed | X |
William Schwenck Gilbert
(1)
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