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end rhyme, internal rhyme, and at least one couplet.
Posted by: Brian Reardon (---.fuse.net)
Date: April 04, 2005 05:37PM

I need to find just one poem that contains the following: end rhyme, internal rhyme, and at least one couplet. Any help would be appreciated.


Re: poetry homework help
Posted by: Shawnte (4.10.3.---)
Date: April 04, 2005 11:26PM

I need help in understanding the poem "To a Mouse" by Robert Burns. I need it before Friday. thanks.


Re: poetry homework help
Posted by: lg (---.ca.charter.com)
Date: April 05, 2005 02:08AM

Swante, type in the words To a mouse in the search box above.


Brian all of Shakespeare's Sonnets and Browning's for that matter, contain rhyming couplets. For internal rhymes and external rhymes read anything by Swinburne.


Les


Re: end rhyme, internal rhyme, and at least one couplet.
Posted by: Hugh Clary (---.denver-02rh15-16rt.co.dial-access.att.net)
Date: April 05, 2005 12:58PM

BLUEBEARD

A maiden from the Bosporus,
with eyes as bright as phosphorus,
Once wed the mighty bailiff
of the caliph of Kelat.
Though diligent and zealous,
he was somewhat prone to jealousy,
(Considering her beauty,
'twas his duty to be that!)

cho: Yuazuram,
oh yuazuram,
Glory hallelujah,
yuazuram.

It might be mentioned, casually,
that blue as lapuz lazuli,
He dyed his lips, his lashes,
his mustaches and his beard.
And, just because he did it, he
aroused his wife's timidity;
Her terror she dissembled,
yet she trembled when he neared.

This feeling insalubrious
soon made her most lugubrious,
And bitterly she missed her
elder sister, Marie Anne;
She asked if she might write her to
come down and spend a night or two,
And Bluebeard answered rightly
and politely, "yes, you can!"

When business would necessitate
a journey, he would hesitate,
But, fearing to mistrust her,
he would trust her with the keys,
Bidding her most prayerfully,
"I beg you'll use them carefully.
Don't look what I deposit
in the closet, if you please."

Bluebeard, the Monday following,
his jealous feeling swallowing,
Packed all his clothes together
in a leather-bound valise,
And, feigning business, sensibly,
he started out, ostensibly
By traveling to learn a
bit of Smyrna and of Greece.

His wife made but a cursory
inspection of the nursery,
The kitchen and the airy
little dairy were a bore,
Likewise the large and scanty rooms,
the billiard, bath, and ante-rooms,
But not that interdicted
and restricted little door!

At last, her curiosity
awakened by the closet he
So carefully had hidden,
and forbidden her to see,
This damsel disobedient
did something inexpedient,
And in the keyhole tiny
turned the shiny little key.

She shrieked aloud convulsively
and started back repulsively
Ten heads of girls he'd wedded
and beheaded met her eye!
And turning 'round, most terrified,
her darkest fears were verified,
For Bluebeard stood behind her,
come to find her on the sly!

Perceiving she was fated to
be soon decapitated, too,
She telegraphed her brothers
and some others what she feared.
And Sister Anne looked out for them,
in readiness to shout for them
Whenever in the distance
with assistance they appeared.

But only from the battlement
she saw some dust that cattle meant.
The ordinary story
isn't gory, it's a jest!
For here's the truth unqualified,
her husband wasn't mollified
Her head is in his bloody
little study with the rest !
-- Newman Levy


Re: end rhyme, internal rhyme, and at least one couplet.
Posted by: Ben Woltermann (---.proxy.aol.com)
Date: April 24, 2005 10:51PM

Thanks for the poem of the end and internal rhyme and a couplet. I'm in the same English class as Brian and we gotta have one for our poetry project.


Re: end rhyme, internal rhyme, and at least one couplet.
Posted by: lg (---.ca.charter.com)
Date: April 24, 2005 11:05PM

Ben, here's another one which contains all three:

Sonnet XCVI
by William Shakespeare

Some say thy fault is youth, some wantonness;
Some say thy grace is youth and gentle sport;
Both grace and faults are loved of more and less;
Thou makest faults graces that to thee resort.
As on the finger of a throned queen
The basest jewel will be well esteem'd,
So are those errors that in thee are seen
To truths translated and for true things deem'd.
How many lambs might the stem wolf betray,
If like a lamb he could his looks translate!
How many gazers mightst thou lead away,
If thou wouldst use the strength of all thy state!
But do not so; I love thee in such sort
As, thou being mine, mine is thy good report.

Les




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