Sonnet 627

Let thought compose a lesson to love’s score
Where wedlock is the measure of the game,
The sweetest blossom beauty ever bore
By different eyes is rarely blessed the same.
While hearts first bleed bright red for novelty
True love bides best as favored floret worn,
Where chasing hopes of grander finery,
By waning odds, oft leaves us more forlorn.
If greener grass lay just beyond the hill
And greater catches further on the main,
By plough or prow we’d swift reward our toil
And hope would bless an ever growing gain.
In love ‘tis best to nurture one dear flower
Than bouquets set to wilt in scarce an hour.

© Loubert S Suddaby. All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 626

How may we speak of love, my Valentine?
So many heart filled hours now mark our bond;
From that first gaze transfixed in golden time
To yestermorn’s shared greeting of the dawn.
This day of Hearts, blood red in sanguine hope
Still stands as tribute to our tender days
And for such truth the singular may grope
For love lies in the main, shared wills and ways.
These words replace a sentimental card
And even loves’ red rose as much the same,
For how can truest love bestow regard
Through borrowed verses lessening your fame.
In truth, I cannot pen what true love means—
Save hearts surfeit of promise…locked in dreams.

© Loubert S Suddaby. All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 625

The beat of life wherein iambs are found,
So oft comprise the pulse of living verse
Where souls mete out their scores in smites of sound,
And march in tempo to life’s greatest force.
These notes of heart and soul are not by chance
For such a rhythm stirred when chords began,
Melodic strains that mark that first cadence
Before life soared, or crawled, or even swam.
We are all creatures of a common source
And by life’s essence share it’s spiral bands,
That we through folly have ignored or parsed,
Since man first drummed  crude claims of I or am;
As hearts tap out this rhythmic primal song—
So shall I write until this beat is gone.

© Loubert S Suddaby. All Rights Reserved.