This is another revised poem and not so easy to guess I hope.
Her beauty turned your head around
You became desperate and wan with love
She was married, the problem made compound
by you buying a neighbour's villa right above
Stalking pious Contessa at church in town
you sent her a flock of snow white doves
disgusted she reacted with froideur and frown
inevitably all things come to push and shove
You could not know of God's gift of good fortune
Your hundreds of ardent poems so amorous
were wasted on Laura La Belle Dame sans pitie
her blue bloodline toxic tainted importune
produced a loony francais notoriously unvirtuous
a maestro of perversion, concupiscence son metier
I think it is cheating if you recycle something and we can't guess, Rall! But I know who this is. However, I shan't spoil it for the others!! Great rhyming.
ReplyDeleteRall, I'm thoroughly stumped. Beautifully written, and your rhyme is nicely done too -- not at all forced.
ReplyDeleteI have two for your prompt this week:
i still dream of shadows: a fictional character
Water: a response to a famous person (not telling who!)
-Nicole
Rall, nicely done and I'm trying to guess without Google. Could this be my favorite Welsh poet?
ReplyDeleteHad some fun with this prompt:
You There, In the Plaid
http://jdmackenzie.blogspot.com/2010/06/you-there-in-plaid.html
I know who this one is, but confess I did an Internet search to fill in the vacuous blanks in my mind. So I won't post my answer here.
ReplyDeleteThe title of my piece provides a hint.
http://bozone-bw.blogspot.com/2010/06/current-american-author.html
I like your poem. No idea who your people are.
ReplyDeletemy poem stinks.
I'm going with Keats, not 100%, but I think definitely a poet.
ReplyDeleteHere's my contribution: SPLIT PERSONALITY
ReplyDeleteYou always find the perfect picture illustrations for your poetry, Rall!!! A most comely wife, is she ...
ReplyDeleteYou are on the right track Stanski. He is a very famous Italian poet.
ReplyDeleteYou know Derrick because you cheated!
ReplyDeleteOooo, I'm cut to the quick, Rall! But here's my contribution; two this week would you believe?!
ReplyDeletehttp://melrosemusings.blogspot.com/2010/06/guess-who-pow-prompt-9.html
I have no idea at all.
ReplyDeleteI posted my link in the wrong place. Here it is again:
http://thelaughinghousewife.wordpress.com/2010/06/30/today-is-my-one-year-b/
OK...clue! The Marquis de Sade is a descendant
ReplyDeleteof Laura.
I've got the name - you made reference in a previous post.
ReplyDeleteYEP!
ReplyDeleteHow come Narcissus has crept on the scene?
ReplyDeleteNarcissus is like that ..always creeping about.
ReplyDeleteBesides, good to look at. He has very nice feet!
I know it's a poet, but not who without google.
ReplyDeleteit's a well-told tale, whoever it is. love the doves.
here's mine and a note -- I will catch up on the visiting this week, I promise. my mother had a bad fall; she's home now (yay!) and I'll have more time to read now.
http://another2doors.wordpress.com/2010/06/29/starbucks-legend/
Still clueless.
ReplyDeleteHere's a nice easy one:
http://thelaughinghousewife.wordpress.com/2010/06/30/another-one/
I was able to narrow it down to one of three based on the photo (and had to cheat with a Wikipedia search to confirm which one it was). Cherchez la femme.
ReplyDeleteMine is much more obvious, I think:
Weightlessness
Last clue. An Italian Poet akin to Shakespeare.
ReplyDeleteRall I have no idea.
ReplyDeleteBut I was going with the Marquis De Sade?
Enjoyed the prompt!
http://flaubert-poetrywithme.blogspot.com/2010/06/no-designer-clothes-who-am-i-pow-9.html
Rall, love the two poems. Great prompt, gets challenging and interesting every week. Here is my attempt - http://umaathreya.blogsome.com/2010/06/30/the-daughter-of-fire/
ReplyDeleteUma your Indian epic poem makes Lady Macbeth look like Mary Poppins. Could not leave comment.gruesome but well crafted.
ReplyDeleteThe answer to mine is Francesco Petrarch.
My poem is in the Petrarchan sonnet form
ABAB/ABAB/CDE/CDE/
Thank you to all for joining in. I could not guess a few.
I guess this is the time and place to reveal our mystery guests...
ReplyDeleteWell done JD Mackenzie - you were correct with David Byrne (Talking Heads).
And congrats to Rall, Pamela and Francis - Salvador Dali was correct.
Well, i did get it finally. after the dead ends. interesting that the family de Sade gave up the title
ReplyDeleteWell Babs, suppose it's not a great name to be associated with. We are going to do a Petro sonnet at some stage. Not as difficult as working out how to put a video on a blog site.
ReplyDelete