“The fear of falsities in rhyme, 
In metre, quantity, or time, 
Is never yours; you sing along 
Your unpremeditated song.”
“Correct,” the young vers librist said. 
“Whatever pops into my head 
I write, and have but one small fetter: 
I start each line with a capital letter.
“But rhyme and metre — Ishkebibble! —  
Are actually negligible. 
I go ahead, like all my school, 
Without a single silly rule.”
Of rhyme I am so reverential 
He made me feel quite inconsequential. 
I shed some strongly saline tears 
For bards I loved in younger years.
“If Keats had fallen for your fluff,” 
I said, “he might have done good stuff. 
If Burns had thrown his rhymes away, 
His songs might still be sung to-day.”
O bards of rhyme and metre free, 
My gratitude goes out to ye 
For all your deathless lines — ahem! 
Let’s see, now . . . What is one of them?