Shoe.
"Silvery shoon" refers to shoes that are shiny and silver in color. This phrase is often used in poetry or literature to evoke an image of elegance or beauty.
"Shoon" is an archaic term for shoes or footwear. It is not commonly used in modern English language.
Perhaps you mean "Restoration poetry"...
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The term "Patent Shoon" translates simply as "Patent Leather Shoes", or "Wearing Patent Leather Shoes". Robert Service uses the phrase in the poem "The Ballad Of Basphemous Bill". In the poem he is listing all the various ways, places and cercumstances Bill might die in "In cabin or dance-hall camp or dive mucklucks or patent shoon". However, the prevous line ends with "Peak faced Moon", so Service uses poetic licence to morph the word "Shoe" into "Shoon" in order to make it rhyme. It's almost a concunction of "Shoe" and "Shod".
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Invoke poetry means, appeal to, call on, summon or request to poetry, deeming poetry as an authority or deity. It generally means look for or search for what poetry has to say on a particular subject or matter.
poetry
ποίηση
You can dedicate a poem to any god, or to God. If you mean 'Who was the god of poetry?' that was Apollo.
poetry is good.
pee and poo