Sonnet Sequence Final
Sonnet Sequence Final
Sonnet Sequence Final
The term derives from the Italian sonetto, a ‘little sound’ or ‘song’. It was
Petrarch, more than anyone, who established the sonnet as one of the
major poetic forms. Except for the curtal sonnet (q.v.) the ordinary
(b) The Spenserian (q.v.) of three quatrains and a couplet, rhyming abab,
Background Check:
1294). He wrote almost 250 sonnets. Other Italian poets of the time,
1300), wrote sonnets, but the most famous early sonneteer was Petrarch.
The structure of a typical Italian sonnet of the time included two parts
the ninth line initiates what is called the "turn", or "volta", which signals
strictly follow the problem/resolution structure, the ninth line still often
the poem.
The Italian form is the commonest. The octave develops one thought;
there is then a ‘turn’ or volta, and the sestet grows out of the octave,
varies it and completes it. In the other two forms (Spenserian and
grows out of the one preceding it; and the argument, theme and dialect
English Sonnet:
well as his own sonnets, drew fast attention to the form. Henry Howard,
the ear, modified the Petrarchan, thus establishing the structure that
language.
rhyme scheme where the three quatrains are linked together: the last line
of the first quatrain rhymes with the first line of the second quatrain; and
similarly, the last line of the second quatrain; and similarly, the last line of
the second quatrain rhymes with the first line of the third quatrain.
Shakespearean Sonnet:
The Shakespearean variety of the sonnet also usually has 14 lines, which
are normally split into three verses of four lines (also called quatrains), and
it usually finishes with a two-line couplet. The poem may appear as a single
‘summing up’ of the main theme of the poem. The rhyme scheme can be
broken into units of abab, cdcd, efef, gg, and there are full stops at line 4
and line 8 and a colon at line 12, which break it into sense units based on
a 4/4/4/2 structure. The basic meter is iambic pentameter with some
sonnets, dealing with themes such as the passage of time, love, beauty
and mortality. They were published together in 1609. The first 126 sonnets
mysterious woman, whom the speaker loves, hates and lusts for
Discussion: However, it was not until the last decade of the 16th c. that
the sonnet was finally established in England. The first major sonnet cycle
was Astrophil and Stella, written by Sir Philip Sidney (c. 1580–3) and
not printed until 1609, but some had circulated in manuscript for at least
By early in the 17th c. the vogue for love sonnets was already over. Ben
Jonson was not interested in the form, and hardly any lyric poet in the
Donne did write nineteen very fine sonnets on religious themes, grouped
Thereafter it was not until Milton that the sonnet received much attention.
Milton did not write a sequence and he did not write about love. His
sonnets belong to the genre of occasional verse (q.v.), and thus are about a
and On the Late Massacre in Piedmont. After Milton the sonnet was
Shelley also wrote two splendid sonnets: Ozymandias and England in 1819.
the sonnet form, and in particular the sonnet sequence about love. The
and her brother Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s The House of Life (1881).
sonnets on many different themes. Robert Frost, John Crowe Ransom and
The Dolphin). Two other distinguished modern poets who have composed
sequences are Geoffrey Hill and Seamus Heaney. In the late 1970s Tony
During over seven hundred years the ‘narrow room of the sonnet’ has
Golden Gate (1986). The recent anthology The Penguin Book of the Sonnet:
collects over six hundred sonnets from Wyatt to 20th c. poets. See also
Sonnet Cycle:
individual. Love is the commonest theme and the advantages of the cycle
are that it enables the poet to explore many different aspects and moods
vicissitudes of the affair. At the same time each individual sonnet lives as
an independent poem.
Of the many cycles the following are the most famous: Dante’s Vita Nuova
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