So, Sparta introduced me to the Sestina form of poetry (if you don't know what a Sestina is, read this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sestina). I was immediately interested and, after a burst of inspiration this evening, I came up with my first ever attempt at writing one. I have to say that it was VERY challenging, but I had a lot of fun writing it and I'm also incredibly proud of the end result -- this is definitely in the top ten pieces of my own writing.
"The Moor"
You stole into my court, proclaimed yourself a prophet
And with due diligence wooed your way into my trust;
Pestilence you poured into my ear and, beyond repentance,
Watched as the pure goat trampled the garden of my palace.
A cuckold am I; a man no longer confident of fidelity,
Whose trust you've gained and have resolved to betray.
Though you sow the seeds of doubt, I shall not betray
My faith in love. It is my last bastion, and you, Prophet,
Weave your web to ensnare my fragile love's fidelity
And like the spider, drain from my neck all trust
I place in she, the ewe who roams the halls of my palace,
Of heart and virtue so pure, she holds no repentance.
Yet still for your treachery, you show no repentance;
It seems you have no desire but to eventually betray
All those who stand beside you and before your own palace.
Thus must my lieutenant also fall pray to you, Prophet?
At the bottom of his bottle he found in you such trust,
So as to cast his sword into the heart of fidelity.
Alas, though I tire, here still I stand to question fidelity
With pestilential thoughts, duly replaced by repentance.
It is reprehensible to suspect my fair love's trust
I hold in such high regard she could ever betray;
And though I turn, the poisonous words of the Prophet
Seem to be written in the blood of goats on every wall of my palace.
Like the tempest whose wrath hath protected Cyprus' palace,
I am ravaged by the storm of her surreptitious fidelity;
If I yet had eyes to see, she has deceived me as her father, Prophet!
She who holds high her fair head, free of repentance;
Nay, no action nor turn of phrase would sooner betray
Her lechery; A fool, I gave her nought but my trust.
What a wretched thing it is to trust,
To unknowingly live within the walls of a false love's palace --
But you, my confidant, whose counsel I could never betray,
In your eye of eyes foresaw the failing of fidelity,
And thus never had a need for the gnawing of repentance;
For your proclamations indeed have made you a Prophet.
But Prophet, you who have proven worthy of my trust,
I beseech you -- your repentance be mine and fill this palace
After I smother her; my fidelity in you, do not betray.
"The Moor"
You stole into my court, proclaimed yourself a prophet
And with due diligence wooed your way into my trust;
Pestilence you poured into my ear and, beyond repentance,
Watched as the pure goat trampled the garden of my palace.
A cuckold am I; a man no longer confident of fidelity,
Whose trust you've gained and have resolved to betray.
Though you sow the seeds of doubt, I shall not betray
My faith in love. It is my last bastion, and you, Prophet,
Weave your web to ensnare my fragile love's fidelity
And like the spider, drain from my neck all trust
I place in she, the ewe who roams the halls of my palace,
Of heart and virtue so pure, she holds no repentance.
Yet still for your treachery, you show no repentance;
It seems you have no desire but to eventually betray
All those who stand beside you and before your own palace.
Thus must my lieutenant also fall pray to you, Prophet?
At the bottom of his bottle he found in you such trust,
So as to cast his sword into the heart of fidelity.
Alas, though I tire, here still I stand to question fidelity
With pestilential thoughts, duly replaced by repentance.
It is reprehensible to suspect my fair love's trust
I hold in such high regard she could ever betray;
And though I turn, the poisonous words of the Prophet
Seem to be written in the blood of goats on every wall of my palace.
Like the tempest whose wrath hath protected Cyprus' palace,
I am ravaged by the storm of her surreptitious fidelity;
If I yet had eyes to see, she has deceived me as her father, Prophet!
She who holds high her fair head, free of repentance;
Nay, no action nor turn of phrase would sooner betray
Her lechery; A fool, I gave her nought but my trust.
What a wretched thing it is to trust,
To unknowingly live within the walls of a false love's palace --
But you, my confidant, whose counsel I could never betray,
In your eye of eyes foresaw the failing of fidelity,
And thus never had a need for the gnawing of repentance;
For your proclamations indeed have made you a Prophet.
But Prophet, you who have proven worthy of my trust,
I beseech you -- your repentance be mine and fill this palace
After I smother her; my fidelity in you, do not betray.