120 'Schoolboyish Petrarchan Sonnets is a collection composed in a
rather basic manner that essentially consisted of starting with a
first word and then 'merely running' with that same word. The
aforementioned schoolboyish aspect of the entire collection should
not at all detract from a sense that a sonnet can be very narrow
and also highly ornate. The various individual examples may seem to
veer here, there, and practically everywhere in terms of possible
'meanings'; meanwhile, each sonnet may be in strict keeping or
almost strict keeping with the apparently preferred formulaics of
John Keats and of the sprung-rhythm 'master' Gerard Manley Hopkins.
Some Forests: some forests must be rich and lovely parts of earthly
wishes for a wondrous day whose every moment soon might seem to say
kind words that speak of splendor that restarts. Implicit in a
wooded world are charts on which might seem to thrive a fine array
of plants and animals that surely pay obeisances eclipsing human
arts. Endangered though all forests now must seem, a great
resilience rules what Nature is till wondrousness will not go up in
steam. which a million shadows dart and whiz.
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