“I-shut-my-eyes-and-all-the-world-drops-dead.” The sound of a heart beat. Aba, aba, aca, dba, aea, abaa, is the rhyme scheme. There is no set order of rhyming in the poem, other than all of the stanzas ending in a word rhyming with said ‘a’. In the second stanza she says, “The stars go waltzing out in blue and red, And arbitrary blackness gallops in: I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead.” By this it seems like she’s passing out or she’s thinking of bad things to make her hypnotized. So when she is focused on …show more content…
Then she fears of what is in front of her. “I fancied you’d return the way you said, but I grew old and I forgot your name, (I think I made you up inside my head).” I feel like this mystery man inside her head is driving her crazy, but as she gets older she comes to her senses and realizes that he is fictional, but she still remembers him in her head. “I should have loved a thunderbird instead; At least when spring comes they roar back again, I shut my eyes and the world drops dead, ( I think i made you up inside my head.)” In this she means that she wished that she would have loved something that would love her back, something that was certain to come back. Like how the birds sing back to her, in the