Minggu, 20 Januari 2013

The Analysis of “A Game of Chess” Poem


A GAME OF CHESS (TO JOHN BRODIE)
By Gwen Harwood

Nightfall: the town’s chromatic nocturne wakes (a)
dark brilliance on the river; colours drift (b)
and tremble as enormous shadows lift (b)
Orion to his place. The heart remakes (a)
that peace torn in the blaze of day. Inside (c)
your room are music, warmth and wine, the board (d)
with chessmen set for play. The harpsichord (d)
begins a fugue; delight is multiplied. (c)

A game: the heart’s impossible ideal-- (e)
to choose among a host of paths, and know (f)
that if the kingdom crumbles one can yield (g)
and have the choice again. Abstract and real (e)
joined in their trance of thought, two players show (f)
the calm of gods above a troubled field. (g)




Analysis

·         The Rhyme Scheme:
The rhyme scheme of “A Game of Chess” is abbacddc efgefg (consist of eight lines and six lines).
·         The Kind of Sonnet:
This poem belongs to Petrarchan sonnet because it consists of eight lines on the first stanza and six lines on the second stanza with different rhymes. Then, from the rhymes scheme, we can identify that it is such kind of Petrarchan sonnet’s rhyme, so it is clearly belongs to Petrarchan sonnet. 

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