Dragonflies Are Back
We know when the sun takes its
hiatus
Buckets of tear drops we see
pouring down;
Hedgerows get pregnant with beds of
cuscus;
Grassy pastures are laced with much
cow-down
Firewood amassed for homes not in
town;
The gurgling sounds of gully
streams pulsate
For all sorts of insects to
conjugate;
Country life is a blissful way of
life;
It fills serenity's cup to the
brim,
From crack of dawn and beyond
sunset blithe;
Eden comes in full view with an
awesome gym,
Nature's store-house of gifts for
us, from Him;
Despite stiff competition we
endure,
Nature holds the keys to unlock
fate's door.
No blazing cane-fields to cause
frustration,
But this scene over the pond to the
west,
Caught my attention and adoration;
Aquatic insects hover at their
best;
These dragonflies are back at
Sunset Crest
Freely mixing mystic power with
grace,
And kites with anchors can't keep
up their pace.
With devil's eyes disguised, they
prey and prey
On wings of light, long before the
ice age;
From prehistoric mist, they've come
to stay
With varied names to stump an
astute sage;
Dreadful names, but do we find
cause for rage?
Whether in damsel wear or dragon
suit;
Insect hides they tan them in hot
pursuit.
Adonately loved by folks
everywhere;
They flaunt their beauty, life
histories and
Amazing acts while mating in the
air;
They search for pond water
throughout the land
On which they lay eggs in the vast
expand;
Hating mosquitoes’ unhealthy
lifestyles
These cute dragonflies feast on
them with flies.
All these dragonflies we respect
greatly
In the West Indies, and across the
sea;
And Japs adore their martial arts
daily.
Look at this dragonfly shot Gregg
sent me;
Such a perch it poses for all to
see
Its bodily colors, flagging
rainbow;
And in its perch its frame lights
up the show.
Rhyme Royal advocates the use of
seven heroic or iambic pentameter verses with the first stanza rhyming ababbcc;
other stanzas that follow would have this rhyming pattern where the first and
third verses rhyme; the second, fourth and fifth verses rhyme; the sixth and
seventh verses rhyme. "Dragonflies Are Back" is structured in accordance
with the rules for creating a Rhyme Royal poem.
Poetry archives do show that
Chaucer first made use of the Rhyme Royal structure in his long poem, Troilus and Criseyde and The Parliament of Fowles. He used it for four of
his Canterbury tales as well.
Here is an extract taken from his works:
Geoffrey Chaucer (ca. 1343-1400)
Excerpt from The
Parliament of Fowls
A garden saw I, full of blossomy boughs
Upon a river, in a green mead,
There as sweetness evermore enough is
With flowers white, blue, yellow, and red,
And cold well-streams, nothing dead,
That swimming full of small fishes light,
With fins red and scales silver bright.
On every bough the birds heard I sing,
With voice of angels in their harmony;
Some busied themselves
birds forth to bring;
The little conveys to here play did hie.
And further all about I could see
The dread filled roe, the buck, the hart and hind,
Squirrels, and beasts small of gentle kind.
My initial reaction to Rhyme
Royal was to think of it as the preferred format for Kings and Queens who wrote
poetry. My insight, was not too far-fetch for sure the archives stated that
James I of Scotland used Rhyme Royal for his Chaucerian poem, The King is Quaire, hence the name, Rhyme Royal.
Other historical icons who have used Rhyme Royal in their poetic creations come
to mind; John Lydgate used it for many of his occasional and love poems.
Shakespeare used it for the Rape of Lucrece.
This form continued to be popular well into the 20th Century. It was used by W.
H. Auden in his Letters to Lord Byron.
Here is an extract of the last two stanzas of Auden's poem to Lord Byron:
Letters
to Lord Byron
(Excerpt)
I know - the fact is really not unnerving -
That what is done is done, that no past dies,
That what we see depends on who's observing,
And what we think on our activities.
That envy warps the virgin as she dries
But Post coitum, homo tristis moans
The lover must go carefully with the greens.
I hope this reaches you in your abode,
This letter that's already fat too long,
Just like the Prelude or the Great North Road;
But here I end my conversational song.
I hope you don't think mail from strangers wrong.
As to its length, I tell myself you'll need it,
You've all eternity in which to read it.
(W.
H. Auden)
The poem “Dragonflies Are Back” is
written in the “first person-plural point of view”. The poet or narrator is in
conversation with the audience; this is so because of the collective pronouns we,
us, our,” being used in this poem as shown in these excerpts from the various
stanzas:
“We
know when the sun takes its hiatus”
“Nature’s
store-house of gifts for us, from Him;
“Caught
our attention and adoration:
Dreadful
names, but do we find cause for rage?
Dragonfly
fauna we respect greatly
Point of View (POV) answers the
question poets ask themselves; ‘who shall be part of this conversation’. In “Dragonflies
Are Back” The poem’s voice is collectively, that of the poet and the audience.
The poem begins with a conversational tone, talking with the audience in a
friendly mode, and continues like this to the end. Also there some intimacy between
them by way of the poet sharing photo gift of a dragonfly received from a
friend with the audience. Clearly in this maneuver, there is a healthy
connection between the poet and the audience at a personal level as portrayed
in the imagery. Poets tend to take an ordinary experience and change it into an
unusual experience for readers, by introducing thoughts which alter readers
experience and allow them to see unusual or even unique aspects of the poet’s
real life. The mood portrayed is emotional. Not many poems are written in first
person-plural point of view from what I have seen, and quite often when they
do, they tend to sound didactic in tone. In fact, poets tend not to write in first
person persona for this tend to label poets as having narcissistic tendencies, a label no one in their
right mind likes to wear.