Villanelle for Spring
Seasons are begging to change again
Sun on the horizon broadening our day,
Warming my heart as spring ages in.
Hands intertwined and when
We adjourn, our feet know the way.
Seasons are beginning to change again
Comfortable against your skin
As you brush loose hairs away,
Warming my heart as spring ages in.
Seasons are beginning to change again
Comfortable against your skin
As you brush loose hairs away,
Warming my heart as spring ages in.
A chance, hope within range
Raising our glasses of champagne,
Seasons are beginning to change again.
I ignore what they say is a sin,
Bodies intertwined, never astray
Warming my heart as spring ages in
Uncontrolled spirals, life will spin
You remain a constant gain although
Seasons are beginning to change again
Warming my heart as spring ages in
Raising our glasses of champagne,
Seasons are beginning to change again.
I ignore what they say is a sin,
Bodies intertwined, never astray
Warming my heart as spring ages in
Uncontrolled spirals, life will spin
You remain a constant gain although
Seasons are beginning to change again
Warming my heart as spring ages in
I LOVE THIS POEM. I, 10/10 recommend reading this on a bench at central park while listening to 'Je ta laisserai de mots' for the full experience.
ReplyDeleteThe feelings of ever changing young long as we, ourselves, change with the seasons around us gives a sense of harmony. The romantic message of : the seasons may change, but my love for you is evergreen is beautiful. Thank you for sharing this poem with the world. One of my favorites.
This was the cutest poem. I was able to see something when I read this. It reminded me of someone young who might have been hurt with love but has reached a healthy love with someone. I liked the usage of an anaphora a lot. Go Enyaaa woooo!
ReplyDeletethis is so beautiful and the language is so pretty! i feel like a little child running through a montage of memories when i read this. my only critique is the rhyme meter. i think it's supposed to be aba. this is such a gorgeous and sweet poem!!
ReplyDeleteThis is warm and hopeful poem--something I think we could all use right now! You do a good job keeping the language natural, and your use of the refrains is perfectly in line with the villanelle form. I love the physical lines like "As you brush loose hairs behind my ear."
ReplyDeleteAlas, however, as we went over in class, villanelles are suppose to follow a consistent patter of rhymes. So this isn't a villanelle, though it is a sweet poem.
As Rina mentioned, a villanelle is supposed to follow a rhyme pattern, like the examples in the book. Maybe it will be easier to see if you read a few more of them and study the rhymes at the end of the lines. You will notice that all of the tercets follow an ABA pattern, as Rina mentioned, while the final stanza--the quatrain--is supposed to follow an ABAA pattern.
So here is an example of you you could change this to make it fit with the form of the villanelle:
Seasons are begging to change,
Sun broadening on the horizon ,
Warming a spring makes winter strange.
Hands intertwined, the moment in range
Practically skipping as we adjourn
Seasons are beginning to change
I am not sure if that is the right way to do it, though, because the "ange" rhyme is hard to sustain. Maybe it would work better with the "in" rhyme as the "A" in the pattern, like this:
Seasons are begging to change again.
Sun on the horizon broadening our day,
Warming my heart as spring ages in.
Hands intertwined and when
we adjourn, our feet know the way.
Seasons are beginning to change again.
Comfortable against your skin,
As you brush loose hairs away,
Warming my heart as spring ages in.
And so on. I hope this helps to better understand how the form works! I can't wait to see what you come up with--whether a new villanelle or a revision of this one.
This poem just made me feel so at ease after reading. It's so soft and beautiful, I loved reading it. The only critique, which Professor Miller and Rina addressed, would be the rhyme scheme; as it's not ABA. I love the refrains you used. They fit well at the end of each stanza and they really tie the poem together. Every time I re-read this poem I like it more.
ReplyDeleteThis poem is gorgeous. It's soft and sweet and I really like your use of anaphora. I'd love to see more rhyming, I feel like it would make it more musical!
ReplyDeleteI'm putting this one up for discussion on Monday!
ReplyDelete