With a Pretty Ding, Dong, Bell

With a Pretty Ding, Dong, Bell

“This has a very pretty madrigalian ‘Ding, dong, bell’ ending.”

~ Emily Daymond, 77

At 15 Hubert tried his hand at straight

Poetic madrigal, a Shakespeare song,

In “Tell Me, Where is Fancy Bred?”  The gate

Of fancy is our eyes and where they long

To settle and to gaze.  The strictest heart

Of music is the madrigal, through two

Or more carved voices.  Singing in each part

Is all controlled by soul.  Each voice in cue

With words must seek emotions of each line,

Indeed of every term.  The voice is led

By feeling in the written phrase.  Design

Flows like a channelled stream, though, from the head.

The mathematic mind inside the boy

Brought forth phrased feelings through this singing toy.

♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪

“Tell Me Where Is Fancy Bred”

(From “The Merchant of Venice”)

Tell me where is fancy bred,

Or in the heart or in the head?

How begot, how nourished?

Reply, reply.

It is engender’d in the eyes,

With gazing fed; and fancy dies

In the cradle, where it lies.

Let us all ring fancy’s knell;

I’ll begin it – Ding, dong, bell.

Ding, dong, bell.

This poem is part of a shorter sonnet sequence within this large sonnet sequence called The Encyclopedia Sonnetica.  The shorter sonnet sequence is called “A Lively Hope.”  I recommend you read this poem where it is set in its sonnet sequence.  To do that, search for “A Lively Hope” here in The Encyclopedia Sonnetica, or you may see an illustrated version the entire shorter sequence at
https://classicalpoets.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/A-Lively-Hope.pdf 
where it was first published.