THE CANDLE: AN INTRODUCTION
When first I wrote “The Candle” for Mimi some time
back, I only wrote the first two stanzas, and afterward I always enterprised to addend it. I later did add two more stanzas
to make it thirty-two lines long. It’s not my best work, but it may be the most
important composition I’ve done. It’s no Donne or Spencer, but she’ll do. Of
course, I never did write Mimi a song (in whole anyway), so perhaps this can be
a temporary substitution.
I
wrote this poem in an interesting way, though it would be undue flattery to
call it novel. The top parts and bottom (indented) parts of the stanza have
different rhyme schemes. This creates a sort of separation between the two
sections. I created this separation so that the reader could peruse just the
top halves of the stanzas or just the bottom halves, and still discern the poem’s
theme or idea. Basically it’s the same poem, written in two different ways,
combined together.
Just
so you can see:
Part
I
1 Dost thou
know, my world is but a candle?:
2
A flicker of fragile flame who fights to exist.
3
And that which blow faster than flame can handle,
4
Oft extinguish that light which fights to persist.
5
When thou
depart, it takes its knavish shape:
6
That wind to
end put my refulgent state.
7
Desolate
left am I, lachrymose, bereft-
8
By wind
whose breath is malice deft.