Tuesday Sonnet: Merits
By john_silver
Tue, 20 Jan 2009
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3 comments
I love the way you speak of sadness as
A gift that none of us deserves, like we
Had not done work enough to find its tree
And pluck its fruits (these our tradition has
Described as sour, and I did believe it.
I did, that is, until your gentle hand
Had fed me them, to let me understand
Which taste bears meaning. Now I know their secret).
But I’ve a special reason to deserve
The suffering I wear like one from Greece:
My fall consumed our friendship. Now I serve
The cause of solitude. It’s only fair; the piece
I asked your heart to play was yours. So swerve
Your good elsewhere, girl. Let me grieve in peace.
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Comments
This is beautiful and
This is beautiful and incredibly sad.
The line,
'to let me understand
Which taste bears meaning' particularly stood out for me, with the Adam and Eve implication.
I was going to say that that line in itself is too long (with the 'Now I know their secret') but upon another few readings, although it looks out of place visually, it fits in the sound scheme of the poem so well, I don't want it changed a bit.
J x
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I agree with the above. The
Permalink Submitted by Geoff Smith on
I agree with the above. The 'secret' scans as its feminine ending joins with 'believe it' in Line 5.
This is very skillfully done. I'll have a look at the others now.
Glad that there's a John Silver on the site.
Thanks for reading. I am grateful for your time.
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