The Nostalgic Conceit

Erfan Korani 1998 (Kermanshahh)



I do trust, indeed, that you've been doing fine,
Since I last saw Your Grace; it may be a sign
Of the Lord of Light that thus split us asunder,
As rain doth to dust when it's brought by thunder!
For the Lord well knew that Winter had just come,
Bringing with it something that was sickly dumb!
Maesters of the old times, and the new, alike,
Could not cure it early! O for one good spike
That would just impale them chin through nose to head,
As they did, unjustly, to our good old Ned!
'Twould be a foul season for one and all, we knew;
Yet, with time we oldened and in wisdom we grew!
I do hope, regardless, that I can remain patient,
Wait out the cold here, South of the Wall, where ancient
Dead men shall not take me, dead or alive! I'd pay
All the North to see you one more time, someday!
E.K

About this poem

After I finished watching Game of Thrones, I wrote this poem in light of my poetic feelings about this last winter and the nostalgia brought about by the Corona Virus Pandemic in the context of the series as a setting for the poem. So, what I've done here is that I've tried to make a thesis of nostalgia, using Corona and Game of Thrones as two separate metaphors for a common purpose, i.e, nostalgic love. The speaker in the poem is John Snow and he declares his love for Khaleesi in the form of the aforementioned conceit.  

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Written on January 01, 2022

Submitted by rapaholic1376 on April 02, 2022

Modified on March 05, 2023

52 sec read
0

Quick analysis:

Scheme AABBCCDDEEFFGGHHI
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 796
Words 172
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 17

Erfan Korani

I'm Erfan Korani, 24 years old, from Kermanshah City, Iran. I'm an English Language & Literature graduate at the B.A level. Additionally, I have an insatiable love for classic poetry and try to create bizarre images and metaphors for the audience in the contexts that I prefer: classical love, chivalry, romantic dilemmas, and whatnot. more…

All Erfan Korani poems | Erfan Korani Books

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    "The Nostalgic Conceit" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 27 Apr. 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem/126613/the-nostalgic-conceit>.

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