Rapunzel Sonnets (Poem)

Emilie Autumn

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    Sonnet I
    Dreaming from my tower in the air
    Higher than the trees surrounding close
    Wondering if men would find me fair,
    Footsteps down below break my repose
    The mist about my window hinders me
    From viewing who would enter in my court
    But so few visitors I chance to see,
    Intent I am on making my report
    And tuning my sweet song towards the earth,
    I'll change my fate, which left me here since birth.

    Sonnet II
    Six notes only had I sounded when
    The footsteps came nearer my prison wall
    Trembled I, yet sounded them again
    And from what seemed the pit of earth heard call
    A voice quite different from those I had heard
    Though I could count that number on one hand
    My lips too dry to speak a single word,
    I wondered why I had not better planned
    And tried in vain to step back from the sill
    For something held my hair and kept me still.

    Sonnet III
    I tried to scream but sound I could not make
    My frightened wit had robbed me of my speech
    I thought of how my tresses I might break,
    But spied the scissors just beyond my reach
    Frantically I fumbled through my skirts,
    Searching for my dagger in the fold
    The same I used for tearing linen shirts
    And as I knew not what of me had hold,
    To sacrifice my braids I raised my knife
    Too late! I now must kill to save my life.

    Sonnet IV
    My point directed at the stranger's chin,
    No time was left for severing his rope
    But shall I murder him or let him in?
    I was too stunned at what I saw to hope
    For some salvation. I knew I was lost
    Whichever was my choice it mattered not
    The mist had cleared, my innocence the cost
    And for one endless moment I was wrought
    Of human flesh and human cares and fears
    The fantasy of fables read for years.

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    Sonnet V
    A face it was, yea, had it lips and eyes,
    But unlike that which greets me in the glass
    In its twin orbs I saw no less surprise
    And so we stood, two statues made of brass
    I gazing in his eyes and he in mine
    As though we might have read each other's thought
    sHe smiled slowly as one drunk with wine
    When suddenly the forest rang with shots
    The hunters oft' before had come too near,
    And so I bid adieu to all my fear.

    Sonnet VI
    Hardly knowing half of what I did
    But well aware the half I knew was mad,
    I grasped his arms as virtue may forbid
    And pulled the creature with what strength I had
    Into the chamber. To the floor we fell,
    Then scrambled I to my poniard retrieve
    And asked him now, at death's third door to tell
    Why cam'st he hence, and bade him not deceive
    For if he should be false, despite his beauty,
    Though I be fooled, my dagger knew its duty.

    Sonnet VII
    His lips then moved but not a sound was heard
    I saw them as two petals from a rose
    When finally he was fit to say a word,
    I was content examining his nose
    He made some mention of a songbird's tune
    I was not listening but o'erlooked his brow
    He claimed he would have climbed up to the moon
    I wished to give him peace but knew not how
    He had not thought his rope a maiden's hair
    Upon my life, I found the creature fair!

    Sonnet VIII
    The deed explained, he begged of me my name
    "Rapunzel" I replied. "A man thou art?"
    "I am" the creature laughed, "The very same
    How long hast thou been kept from life apart?"
    I told him how, for one and twenty years,
    My home had been the walls he saw around me
    How no amount of pleading, nor no tears
    Have gained a visitor until he found me
    But when I think upon it I recall,
    For staring, he did not hear me at all.

    Sonnet IX
    It seemed to me we may as well not speak
    His eyes had gone as cloudy as the day
    He asked if he might come again that week
    And I knew he must soon be gone away
    He took my hands and pressed them in his own
    As if by doing so he should stay longer
    He told me of the world I might have known,
    Vowing to return and slay my wronger
    Then promising no harm, his head he bent
    And kissed my lips, then out the sill he went.

    Sonnet X
    Lowering himself as he had come,
    Through the mist my creature disappeared,
    Riding back to all that he was from
    And all that I could never be I feared
    And yet what raven locks fell round his face
    What gentle eyes as gray as seagulls wings
    A voice so soft my words cannot replace
    The memory of a thousand lovely things
    And so I'll dream again of arms more sweet
    The dagger I had dropped lies at my feet.

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