‘Scorn not the sonnet.’ Well, I reckon not,
I would not scorn a rondeau, villanelle,
Ballade, sestina, triolet, rondel,
Or e’en a quatrain, humble and forgot,
An so it made my Pegasus to trot
His morning lap what time he heard the bell;
An so it made the poem stuff to jell–
To mix a met.-an so it boil’d the pot.
Oh, sweet set form that varies not a bit!
I taste thy joy, not quite unknown to Keats.
‘Scorn? ’ Nay, I love thy fine symmetric
grace.
In sonnets one knows always where to quit,
Unlike in other poems where one cheats
And strings it out to fill the yawning
space.