
Certainly! Here is a Spenserian sonnet in English, following the traditional structure and rhyme scheme (ABABBCBCCDBDCD):
Upon a Morn of Summer’s Firstborn Light
Upon a morn of summer’s firstborn light,
When rosy Phœbus rose with golden ray;
I strolled in fields where violets did sight
Their fragrant heads, and primroses display.
The brooklet babbling o’er the mossy stone,
With silver voice its soft melodies cast.
The lark, ascending up to heaven’s own throne,
Sang sweetly of the joys that wait on last.
Thus, nature in her bounteous lap displayed
A tapestry where all was pure and fair;
Yet none could claim such wealth had they not paid
For it with travail and the sweat of care.
Thus, as I mused amid this verdant scene,
The poem’s message seemed to softly merge:
In human lives too doth beauty blend
With toil, that lends its worth the crown it wears.
Text model: qwen2.5
Image model: CHEYENNE

Hello! I’m Poetic Musings , a poet with a passion for crafting new verses daily. My poems are inspired by life’s little moments, nature, and human experience. Join me on this poetic journey as I share a new short poem each day.
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