The blogger ibikunle Abraham laniyan churn out top fifty sonnets on victory
Here is an expansive collection of 50 original sonnets written in the traditional Shakespearean form (ABAB CDCD EFEF GG), tracking the themes of triumph, overcoming adversity, inner strength, and ultimate victory.
Part I: The Triumph of the Mind & Spirit
1. The Light Within
The darkest shadows gather round the mind,
When heavy doubts like iron chains descend,
And seek to leave our hopes and visions blind,
As if the forward march had reached its end.
But deep within the core a spark remains,
A quiet fire that refuses death,
That breaks the heavy link of mental chains,
To grant the weary soul a second breath.
The mind is king of its internal space,
No outside force can take the crown away,
If we look forward with a steady face,
To turn the longest night into the day.
For victory begins before the fight,
When inner weakness yields to inner light.
2. The Patient Mind
To rush the field before the time is right,
Is but to throw the final prize away;
The wise companion of the silent night,
Knows how to watch, to balance, and to stay.
Let others run and waste their early force,
And spend their passion on a shallow aim,
The steady pilot keeps a quiet course,
And does not care for temporary fame.
The slow design is better than the fast,
When structured well against the rising wind,
The structures built on vanity won’t last,
But triumph yields unto the patient mind.
The race is won by those who can endure,
With steps deliberate and purpose sure.
3. Sovereign of Silence
The loudest voices often claim the prize,
Before the battle has been truly won,
They fill the empty air with shallow cries,
And boast of deeds that never have been done.
But true dominion speaks in quiet tones,
It has no need for trumpets or for praise,
It sits secure upon internal thrones,
And calmly counts the passing of the days.
Let others shout their anger to the sky,
And shake their fists at every passing cloud,
The sovereign soul allows the storm to die,
Too firm to break, too stable to be proud.
The greatest conquest over grief and pain,
Is keeping peace where chaos tries to reign.
4. The Citadel of Thought
They build their stone defenses high and wide,
With heavy gates to lock the world away,
And hope the physical walls can safely hide,
The shifting fortunes of a bitter day.
Yet stone can crack and iron gates must fall,
When mighty engines batter at the gate,
There is no safety in a granite wall,
Against the heavy hands of time and fate.
The only fortress that can stand the strain,
Is found within the citadel of thought,
Where outside losses cannot bring us pain,
And inner peace can never be unbought.
Who rules the kingdom of the mind within,
Has won the war before the fights begin.
5. Quiet Sovereignty
The world demands a show of outward might,
A heavy hand to prove a sudden claim,
A blade that flashes in the public light,
To carve a bloody pathway unto fame.
But there is power in a quiet will,
That does not seek to break a weaker foe,
That stands immovable, relaxed, and still,
While all the rushing currents surge below.
To rule oneself is more than ruling lands,
Or taking cities by a sudden force,
It requires no weapons in the open hands,
But simply keeping to a steady course.
The highest victory we ever find,
Is sovereign quiet in a balanced mind.
6. The Shield of Calm
When accusations fly like arrows sharp,
And angry words are thrown to break the peace,
When critics strike upon a bitter harp,
And wish the storms of malice to increase.
The balanced spirit does not raise a hand,
Nor does it offer anger in return,
It chooses like a monument to stand,
And lets the fires of resentment burn.
For words have only power if we care,
And insults fade if they are left alone,
They vanish like the smoke into the air,
Against a heart as steady as a stone.
The shield of calm protects the inner state,
And leaves us victor over spite and hate.
7. Mastery of Self
The hardest foe to meet upon the field,
Is not the army marching from afar,
It is the hidden self that will not yield,
And wages inside us a constant war.
The dark desires that whisper in the dark,
The sudden fears that paralyze the hand,
The lazy thoughts that miss the forward mark,
These are the kings that rule our inner land.
To conquer nations is a simple thing,
Compared to putting our own faults to flight,
To make the wild passions serve the king,
And bring the hidden shadows to the light.
The crown of victory is only real,
When inner self obeys the spirit's steel.
8. The Core Secure
Let changing fortunes spin their restless wheel,
And raise a man today to cast him down,
The blows of chance can never pierce the steel,
Of him who does not crave a golden crown.
If you are anchored in your own esteem,
The praise of crowds is just a passing wind,
The grandest honors are a fleeting dream,
That cannot shake a self-collected mind.
To win the world but lose your inner peace,
Is but a failure masked in bright attire,
A temporary joy that soon must cease,
To leave you burning in a fruitless fire.
Keep then the core secure from outside praise,
And you shall conquer all the changing days.
9. The Solitary King
He sits alone upon a mountain height,
And watches kingdoms rise and disappear,
He does not take a part in any fight,
Because his mind is free from hope and fear.
The busy valleys shout of loss and gain,
And build their short-lived trophies in the mud,
They spend their years in vanity and pain,
And wash their triumphs in a sea of blood.
But solitary kingship of the soul,
Requires no subjects and no bloody sword,
It keeps the shattered pieces clean and whole,
By being its own master and its lord.
The final victory over mortal breath,
Is standing calm before the face of death.
10. The Anchor of Will
The world may shake and institutions fall,
And friends may vanish like the morning mist,
The heavy clouds of doubt may cover all,
And everything we love may cease to exist.
Yet if the anchor of the will holds fast,
The vessel cannot drift upon the shore,
It rides the waves until the storm has passed,
And stands as ready as it was before.
The circumstances cannot change our worth,
Unless we give them power to control,
There is no sudden accident on earth,
That can destroy a self-directed soul.
The ultimate conquest that we ever see,
Is maintaining our internal liberty.
Part II: Overcoming Adversity & Defeat
11. Rise from Ashes
The fire burned the palace to the ground,
And left but gray smoke upon the floor,
No trace of ancient glory could be found,
And ruin sat beside the broken door.
The critics smiled to see the sudden fall,
And said the story now had reached its close,
That black oblivion would cover all,
The memories of him who once arose.
But ashes are the birthplace of the new,
A fertile soil where secret seeds can grow,
The ancient roots are strong and deep and true,
And wait beneath the surface of the snow.
The fire only cleared the crowded space,
For greater structures in a better place.
12. The Winter Field
The winter field is bare and cold and white,
The trees stand naked in the freezing air,
The sun provides a short and distant light,
As if the world were frozen in despair.
But underneath the hard and icy crust,
The quiet forces prepare for the spring,
They do not lose their patience or their trust,
But wait to hear the returning birds sing.
So let the season of your trial come,
And strip away the green leaves of your pride,
Though all the voices of your joy are dumb,
The living essence has not truly died.
The victory of growth is always slow,
And spends its early days beneath the snow.
13. The Broken Blade
The sword was broken in the middle strike,
The shield was shattered by a heavy blow,
The battlefield was cold and iron-like,
And all the vantage given to the foe.
The fallen soldier lay upon the clay,
And heard the distant shout of those who fled,
It seemed the final ending of the day,
With hope discarded underneath the dead.
But hands can grip a sharp and broken stone,
When iron weapons fail the weary grip,
A man can fight the battle all alone,
With silent determination on his lip.
The true warrior does not need his sword,
To prove that courage is its own reward.
14. Out of the Depths
The water gathered deep above my head,
The heavy currents pulled me down below,
The light of day was vanished, cold, and dead,
And all around me was a dark echo.
The pressure of the deep was like a weight,
That sought to crush the breath out of my chest,
It seemed the final stroke of bitter fate,
To lay my weary bones to permanent rest.
But foot can push against the ocean floor,
And use the bottom as a place to rise,
To drive the body upward to the shore,
And bring the vision back to sunny skies.
The deepest valley that we ever tread,
Can be the ladder out of fear and dread.
15. The Unbroken Line
They broke our front and took the outer wall,
And forced our weary legions to retreat,
They thought the sudden damage would be all,
To make our separation quite complete.
But though the line is bent, it is not torn,
The center holds against the heavy stress,
A new determination has been born,
From out the middle of our great distress.
We gather in the shadow of the hill,
And count the numbers that are left to fight,
The hands are steady and the spirits still,
To make a stand before the coming night.
The foe has won the valley and the plain,
But we shall take the mountain back again.
16. The Alchemist of Pain
The heavy burdens that are laid on us,
The grief that sits like iron on the heart,
Can turn a happy life to hazardous,
And tear the fabric of our joy apart.
But we can choose to take the bitter stone,
And change its nature by a secret art,
To build a palace where we sit alone,
And make a fresh beginning from the start.
For pain is but a raw and heavy thing,
A block of marble waiting for the knife,
A sudden challenge that can force a king,
To carve a greater beauty out of life.
The alchemist of pain can always find,
A golden treasure in a troubled mind.
17. The Defiant Oak
The great storm blew across the open plain,
And broke the branches of the ancient oak,
It brought a heavy sea of wind and rain,
And split the trunk with one decisive stroke.
The lesser trees were bent unto the ground,
And saved their leaves by bowing to the blast,
They looked upon the ruin all around,
And glad were they the danger now had passed.
But though the oak is scarred and split in two,
Its deep roots grip the dark and heavy soil,
It starts to grow its green leaves anew,
To mock the tempest and the storm’s turmoil.
A noble thing may suffer from the gale,
But inner strength refuses to fail.
18. Turning the Tide
The wave was high and crested with the foam,
It swept away the structures on the sand,
It drove the sailors far away from home,
And left them stranded in a lonely land.
The tide was running fast against the shore,
As if it wished to swallow up the earth,
And leave the places where we lived before,
Without a trace of value or of worth.
But tides must reach their limit and stand still,
Before they turn and run the other way,
Obeying laws beyond our human will,
To bring the promise of another day.
So let the currents drive against your face,
For they shall carry you to victory's place.
19. The Midnight Watch
The clock strikes twelve across the silent town,
The heavy fog is hanging on the street,
The stars are hidden as the rain comes down,
To wash the tracks of all our weary feet.
The watchman stands alone upon the wall,
And looks into the darkness of the night,
No sign of comfort can he see at all,
No distant promise of a friendly light.
Yet well he knows the sun is moving fast,
Beneath the circle of the hidden earth,
The longest dark must yield its place at last,
To give the morning a glorious birth.
The victory of light is safe and sure,
To those who have the patience to endure.
20. The Second Wind
The limbs are heavy and the breath is short,
The distance seems to lengthen out ahead,
The mind suggests a comfortable port,
And whispers that we might as well be dead.
The competitors are passing one by one,
With easy strides that show no sign of pain,
It seems our little race is fully done,
And all our early efforts were in vain.
But suddenly a secret valve unlocks,
And gives the blood a fresh and burning force,
The spirit rises over stone and rocks,
To drive the body down the weary course.
The second wind is given to the brave,
Who refuse to find an early grave.
Part III: Daily Discipline, Focus, & Action
21. The Daily Strife
The little tasks that fill the passing hour,
The small details that weary out the eye,
Can rob the spirit of its natural power,
And pass the grandest visions slowly by.
We look for sudden glory in the sky,
A grand occasion to display our might,
And let the common moments pass us by,
Without a care for doing what is right.
But victory is built of small stones,
Laid down with care across the passing days,
It does not sit on sudden gold thrones,
Nor does it care for temporary praise.
The master of the common daily strife,
Is he who wins the crown of human life.
22. The Silent Forge
The heavy hammer strikes the glowing steel,
And sends the bright sparks flying through the air,
The heavy pressures that the metals feel,
Are shaping weapons that are strong and rare.
The forge is hot and dark and filled with smoke,
No music sounds within the narrow room,
But blow by blow, and stroke by patient stroke,
The iron changes in the heavy gloom.
We wish for triumphs in the open sun,
Where crowds can see the flash of our design,
But all the greatest work is slowly done,
Within the shadows of a silent line.
Accept the heat, the pressure, and the blow,
For they shall make your inner power grow.
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