Ronsardian
Ode
The Ronsardian
ode (named after Pierre de Ronsard 1524-1585)
is the only kind of ode that specifies a particular rhyming scheme - ababccddc, with
syllable counts of 10, 4, 10, 4, 10, 10, 4, 4, 8.  
In the present rather windy economic climate, I thought
an owed might be appropriate.
Owed to the Bank
I rue the day when I picked up the
phone
(Connected then)
And asked them to advance me a
small loan.
Never again!
The moment the transaction was
arranged,
The pattern of my entire life was
changed.
More than I’d guessed,
The interest
Mounts up. I must have been
deranged.
Eleven thousand pounds I owe, they
say.
That’s quite a debt.
I swear I’ll pay it back to them
one day,
But not just yet.
Meanwhile I need a place to lay my
head,
A jug of wine perhaps, a loaf of
bread.
Then there’s my wife...
For normal life
Can’t stop because I’m in the red.
I’ve hardly slept since this
nightmare began.
I lie awake,
Find fatal flaws in every single
plan
I try to make -
But last night all my ideas seemed
to gel.
I’ll find another job; all will be
well.
A banking post
Will pay the most.
Why’s that? It’s not too hard to
tell.
Ah,
life as a teller. It's a tempting thought. I think there should probably be a
fourth stanza, but as yet there isn't. Sorry.
I
bought a book of Ronsard’s selected poems, and it didn’t include a single
Ronsardian ode. So some further research may be called for.
Thanks to Bob Newman
for his wonderful Volecentral resource site.
My example poem
Ode to a Creek        (Ronsarian Ode)
The little creek was
built to irrigate 
so men could farm. 
Thus, daily men
would rise to raise some gate
when days were warm.
Those summer days
the creek would draw the  boys 
away from practiced
games and silly toys 
to share the breeze 
with brush and trees
that lined the
creek, contained their noise. 
The larger boys had
tied a swinging rope 
on which we played 
and dropped to take
our daily bath sans soap, 
quite unafraid. 
When swing and drop
became at last mundane 
up to that branch
we'd boldly climb again 
into two feet 
it seemed so neat, 
we bore our
scratches with disdain. 
One fall they warned
we could not swim nor fish 
White poison flowed 
and fish preceded
it; to live their wish. 
Death was bestowed 
on parasites and all
the mossy growth. 
But all the neighbor
boys I knew were loath 
to think them right 
when deadly white 
killed life and our
short season both. 
When winter came a
fragile sheet of ice 
made young boys bold
for they could walk
across it once or twice 
when it was cold. 
They'd taunt the
older boys and wouldn't care 
how fast were bigger
kids who'd chase them there. 
The small ones knew 
just what to do; 
The bigs fell
through most anywhere. 
I cannot tell now
where that creek had been; 
growth needs, I
guess. 
New roads exist that
hadn't been there then, 
such is progress. 
That creek's as gone
as are my boyhood years. 
but still the
memories of it endears. 
It served its roles 
and other goals 
before it bowed and
disappeared. 
© Lawrencealot -
April 15, 2014
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