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Poetry Form - The Sonnet

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Buy Sonnets by Phillis Levin

The Making of a Poem: A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms


Edited by Mark Strand and Eavan Boland.

The Sonnet Verse Form


by J. Zimmerman

History. Form. How to - Your Composition. Books on the Sonnet. Books on Poetic Forms. Samples.
Do you have a passion to express, an argument to press? As in "All's fair in love and war", the
Sonnet may be the form you need, whether to convince the one you love or to convince the
world.

The name Sonnet came (through the French) from the Italian sonnetto ("little sound" or "little
song").

History.

The marvelous The Penguin Book of the Sonnet: 500 Years of a Classic Tradition in English,
with an insightful and illuminating essay by Phillis Levin, details the international as well as
the English-language development of the Sonnet. Her book includes over 600 Sonnets from
5-centuries in the English tradition.

Historically, the Sonnet was first written in English by Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503-1542).
Earlier, Geoffrey Chaucer (1343-1400) wrote Canticus Troili in his Troilus and Criseyde as
a version of Francesco Petrarca's Canzioniere 132 Sonnet.

Initially, the Sonnet appeared in the early thirteenth century at the Sicilian court of
Frederick II (King of Sicily (1197-1250) and Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire (1197-
1250)). Sicily, the island off the south coast of Italy, is as close to the Ionian Islands as
to Rome, and nearer to Tunis than to Naples. Thus it was a land where Arab, Greek, and
Latin cultures interwove and influenced each other.

How did the Sonnet come into existence? With its repetition of words rather than rhymes
(in its initial Sicilian form), it may derive from Troubadour forms like the Sestina. Some
have speculated that it may also have been influenced by the great form of Arabic culture,
the Ghazal, though it is the opinion of our local Ghazal essayist that such influence is not
strong.

The Italian (or Petrarchan) Sonnet developed from the Sicilian Sonnet, by using envelope
rhyme (instead of the alternating rhyme of the Sicilian Sonnet) in the octave.

Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) wrote the first Sonnet Sequence. Francesco Petrarca (1304-
1374) published Canzioniere, "a narrative [made] out of a necklace of short poems" (as
reported in The Making of a Poem: A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms, Edited by Mark
Strand and Eavan Boland).

The French Sonnet developed from the Italian Sonnet, by using a rhyming couplet (instead
of chained rhyme) for the first two lines in the sestet.

The English (or Shakespearean) Sonnet and the Spenserian Sonnet also developed from
the Italian Sonnet. The English (Shakespearean) and the Spenserian Sonnet both use
alternating rhymes and conclude with a rhymed couplet. The Spenserian Sonnet is closer to
the Italian, as both have the same number of rhymes, which is five. By contrast, the
English (Shakespearean) Sonnet has seven.

Over the centuries, many poets have developed variations of the Sonnet. These include the
Caudated Sonnet (from John Milton), the Curtal Sonnet (invented by Gerald Manley
Hopkins ), and other Sonnet forms.

Form.

In a traditional Sonnet:

There are 14 lines.

The poet introduces at least one volta (or a jump or shift in direction of the emotions
or thought), usually somewhat after the middle of the Sonnet.

If the poet writes in the form of the Sicilian Sonnet, Italian (or Petrarchan) Sonnet,
or French Sonnet, she begins with an octave and concludes with a sestet. She places
the volta between the octave and the sestet. She may indicate the volta by a stanza
break.

In English, we are especially familiar with the English (or Shakespearean) Sonnet and
the Spenserian Sonnet. In both, the poet groups lines in three quatrains followed by
a closing rhymed couplet. She places a shift (a more subtle change than the volta)
between the second and third quatrains.

In addition to the above, the English (or Shakespearean) Sonnet:


1. Has an alternating rhyme scheme in the quatrains (e.g., "a b a b").
2. Has a turn between the third quatrain and the concluding couplet. Often this
marks a change from the presentation of images and the building of a case (in
the quatrains). After the turn, the poet often states a conclusion, sometimes
the "meaning" or "purpose" of the poem.
3. Often has its greatest power in the concluding couplet.

Meanwhile, the Spenserian Sonnet (in addition to features shared with the English
(or Shakespearean) Sonnet) has an envelope or kissing rhyme, "abba".

The original Sicilian Sonnet arrived in the early thirteenth century at the Sicilian
court of Frederick II. The Sicilian Sonnet has an octave of rima alternata
("alternating rhyme"). In the initial version, the same word was repeated instead of
new words being introduced in rhyme.

Details of forms, in historical order.


The Sonnet of the Sicilian Court of Frederick II (early 13th century) has this form (for
information on the volta see forms of the Sonnet):

(1) Octave of rima alternata ("alternating rhyme"), initially created by repetition of


words. In the following, each digit represents a specific word. The poet uses one pair of
words in the octet and a different pair in the sestet.

1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 - End words of lines in octet.


- Volta (not a physical gap).
3 4 3 4 3 4 - End words of lines in sestet.

(2) Later, rhyming words appeared. The poet, still using rima alternata, uses one pair of
rhymes in the octet and a different pair in the sestet.

a b a b a b a b - End words of lines in octet.


- Volta
c d c d c d - End words of lines in sestet.

(3) Next, keeping the same form for the octet, the Sicilian Sonnet formed the sestet
using rima incatenata ("chained rhyme" or "linking rhyme"), an interlaced pattern of
rhyme.

a b a b a b a b - End words of lines in octet.


- Volta
c d e c d e - End words of lines in sestet show "chained rhyme".
Many variations are possible.

The Italian (or Petrarchan) Sonnet starts with rhyming words in the pattern of rima
baciata ("kissing rhyme"), which in English we call "envelope" rhyme. It ends with a sestet
in "chained rhyme", which can use a variety of sequences:

a b b a a b b a - End words of lines in octet.


- Volta
c d e - First tercet for first three lines in sestet.
c d e - Second tercet for last three lines in sestet.
Variations of the last six lines include:
'c d e d c e' or 'c d c d c d'.

The French Sonnet begins with an octave of the form used in an Italian Sonnet. Then,
immediately after the volta, the French Sonnet anchors the start of its sestet by making a
couplet:

a b b a a b b a - End words of lines in octet (as in the Italian Sonnet).


- Volta
c c - Rhyming couplet for first two lines in sestet.
d e d e - Final quatrain concludes the sestet;
variations are possible, such as 'd c c d' or 'd e e d'.

While Chaucer was the first to translate a Sonnet into English, Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503-
1542) was the first to write his own Sonnets in English. He adapted the Italian form to
create what we subsequently call the Spenserian Sonnet.

This form contains three quatrains. They are interlocked by the repetition in both the
second and third quatrains of a rhyme from the quatrain that immediately precedes it.

A shift (as noted in forms of the Sonnet) occurs before the third quatrain, in the place
where the Italian form has a volta. Notice that the rhyme scheme is the the same before
and after the shift, whereas it differs before and after the volta. Matching content to
form, the jump in the poem tends to be more subtle at the shift than at the volta.

The Spenserian Sonnet concludes with a rhymed couplet. The resulting form is:

a b a b - End words of first quatrain in alternating rhyme.


b c b c - End words of second quatrain in alternating rhyme,
with repetition of the last rhyme in the first quatrain.
- Shift.
c d c d - End words of third quatrain in alternating rhyme,
with repetition of the last rhyme in the second quatrain.
e e - Heroic couplet.

The English (or Shakespearean) Sonnet (16th century) contains three quatrains, each with
an independent pair of alternating rhymes. Both a shift and a turn (as noted in forms of
the Sonnet) occur respectively before and after the third quatrain.

Like the Spenserian Sonnet, the English Sonnet concludes with a rhymed couplet. The
resulting form is:

a b a b - End words of first quatrain in alternating rhyme.


c d c d - End words of second quatrain in alternating rhyme.
- Shift.
e f e f - End words of third quatrain in alternating rhyme.
- Turn.
g g - Heroic couplet.

The Caudated (or Miltonian) Sonnet was developed by John Milton (17th century):

a b b a a b b a - Octet, as in the Italian Sonnet.


- Volta
c d e c d e - Sestet, as in the Italian Sonnet.
e f f - 1st tail triplet, with three feet in the first line,
whose rhyme repeats the last rhyme from the sestet.
f g g - 2nd tail triplet, with three feet in the first line,
whose rhyme repeats the last rhyme from the triplet.

The Curtal Sonnet was invented by Gerald Manley Hopkins. It begins with 6 lines that can
be thought of as serving the function of an octave. Then, it concludes with 4 and a half
(that's right - a half) lines, which serve the function of a sestet.
a b c a b c - Six lines (in place of the Octet).
- Volta
d b c d c - Four lines plus a short ('half') line (in place of the Sestet).

However Hopkins primarily used this form:

a b b a a b b a - Octet, as in the Italian Sonnet.


- Volta
c d c d c d - Sestet, as in the second type of Sicilian Sonnet above.

Other Sonnet forms include (as in Levin's The Penguin Book of the Sonnet):

Couplet Sonnet: 7 rhyming couplets.


Crown of Sonnets: A sequence of 7 to 14 Sonnets. The last line of a Sonnet is the
first line of the Sonnet that follows it.
Double Sonnet: (1) Two sonnets that together form a single poem. (2) A Sonnet that
doubles the 14-line rhyme scheme. (3) A Sonnet that repeats the octave rhyme
pattern and then the sestet pattern.
Envelope Sonnet: Derived from the Italian Sonnet, with the change that the last four
lines of the octet use two different rhymes from those in the first four lines.
Heroic Sonnet: An 18-line poem that is like the English Sonnet with the addition of a
fourth quatrain (after the third) in alternating rhyme.
Pushkin Sonnet: A 14-line Sonnet with rhyme scheme "ababccddeffegg". It can be
read either as an Italian form (two quatrains plus two tercets) or as an English form
(three quatrains plus a closing couplet).
Rondel Prime: A 14-line poem that is a variant of the 13-line Rondel (a French form)
to which a line is added.
Sonnet Redoubl: A sequence of 15 Sonnets. Each of the 14 lines of the first Sonnet
becomes the last line (in turn) of each subsequent Sonnet.
Terza Rima Sonnet: A sonnet in terza rima (aba bcb cdc ded ee).

How to - Your Composition.

The varieties of forms of the Sonnet give you lots of options.

1. If you are new to the Sonnet, first ponder which type you will write.

2. You might decide to use the more familiar English (or Shakespearean) Sonnet or the
Italian (or Petrarchan) Sonnet. Be sure to consider the great attraction in the
Sicilian Sonnet in its initial form, where you use word repetition. That lets you avoid
having to worry about rhyme.

3. Assuming you decide on the Sicilian Sonnet, free write for ten minutes about your
topic. Then read what you drafted, and pick from it words that occur often, that you
want in your Sonnet, and that are strong and interesting words. As with composing
the Sestina, pick concrete nouns and active verbs.

4. If you decide on the Sicilian Sonnet, you only need four words. Lay them out like this
on your page (whether carbon or silicon based):

1
2
1
2
1
2
1
2

3
4
3
4
3
4

5. If you decide (gulp) on the English (or Shakespearean) Sonnet, you need 7 words (a1-
g1) and you need to think of interesting rhyming words (a2-g2) to each of them. Lay
them out like this on your page:

a1
b1
a2
b2

c1
d1
c2
d2

e1
f1
e2
f2

g1
g2

You might think of some of the rhyme words when you are choosing your words, and
others may not come (like Yeats) till you have written a ton of drafts.

6. As with the Sestina, etc., you can use the repetition to delve more deeply into your
material.

7. Sometimes a writer finds that a later quatrain or line is much stronger than her first
one. Feel free to move it to the start of the Sonnet. Keep reorganizing the material
if it helps you come closer to what you feel and believe and want to communicate.
8. Check that you have followed all the features of your form, thus proving that you
have power over language instead of it having power over you.

9. As with all formal poems nowadays, it is vital that the form does not "drive" your
poem. If the rhyme scheme and form begin to feel forced, then you must assert the
poem's content.

10. Traditionally, you keep the same line length throughout a Sonnet (unless you are
Gerald Manley Hopkins). The traditional length centers around (but does not
obsessively lock-step with) iambic pentameter in English. That gives the rhythmic
repetition that the ear associates with music. It also gives a pleasant appearance on
the page.

Sometimes a writer varies line lengths in order to challenge the listener's or


reader's expectations: that is fine if you do it deliberately. Just don't be lazy and
cut lines short or let them run long because you can't be bothered to fix your poem's
problems.

11. Explore writing the type of traditional Sonnet you chose for a week or two. Once you
feel some command of it, pick another version of the traditional Sonnet, and write
poems in that form.

12. For a month or two, explore writing in a different Sonnet form each week.

13. Then, once you have the tools you might, like Gerald Manley Hopkins (the Curtal
Sonnet) or John Milton (the Caudated Sonnet) invent your own form!

14. The less you follow a traditional Sonnet form, the less you can claim to have written a
Sonnet. Again, only break a form's rules because you choose to, not because you lack
the skills and devotion to make your poem work in a traditional form.

A Last Word.

Just because you start with the intention of writing a Sonnet, you do not have to keep
your poem in that form if it does not work for you. Your attempt to write a formal poem
may help you find words that you would not have found otherwise. And you may decide that
you choose to end up with a poem in a different form, perhaps even a prose poem.

Samples of Sonnets.

One of the more delightful Sonnets about Sonnets is by Billy Collins (author of Sailing
Alone Around the Room) called (inevitably) Sonnet; it was first published in Poetry, 173 (4)
(February, 1999). It begins:
All we need is fourteen lines, well, thirteen now,
and after this next one just a dozen
to launch a little ship on love's storm-tossed seas,
then only ten more left like rows of beans.
How easily it goes unless ...

William Wordsworth (1770-1850) gave us many great sonnets, especially "The world is too
much with us":

The world is too much with us; late and soon,


Getting and spending , we lay waste our powers:
Little we see in Nature that is ours;
We have given our hearts away, a sordid boon!
The Sea that bares her bosom to the moon;
The winds that will be howling at all hours,
And are up-gathered now like sleeping flowers;
For this, for everything, we are out of tune;
It moves us not.--Great God! I'd rather be
A Pagan suckled in a creed outworn;
So might I, standing on this pleasant lea,
Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn;
Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea;
Or hear old Triton blow his wreathd horn.

and "Nuns Fret Not at Their Convent's Narrow Room":

Nuns fret not at their convent's narrow room


And hermits are contented with their cells;
And students with their pensive citadels;
Maids at the wheel, the weaver at his loom,
Sit blithe and happy; bees that soar for bloom,
High as the highest Peak of Furness-fells,
Will murmur by the hour in foxglove bells:
In truth the prison, into which we doom
Ourselves, no prison is: and hence for me,
In sundry moods, 'twas pastime to be bound
Within the Sonnet's scanty plot of ground;
Pleased if some Souls (for such there needs must be)
Who have felt the weight of too much liberty,
Should find brief solace there, as I have found.

If you are serious about writing Sonnets, you need a Sonnet collection like the excellent
The Penguin Book of the Sonnet: 500 Years of a Classic Tradition in English, edited by
Phillis Levin.

Books.

The Penguin Book of the Sonnet: 500 Years of a Classic Tradition in English,
Phillis Levin (Editor) . If you pick a single book on the Sonnet, this is the one!
The Penguin Book of the Sonnet gives you the development of the form, so you
can try your hand at:

not only the the English (or Shakespearean) Sonnet but also the Spenserian
Sonnet.
not only the Italian (or Petrarchan) Sonnet, but also the French Sonnet.
even the Godfather of the form - three variants of the Sicilian Sonnet,
from the Sonnet's birth island, Sicily.

Levine's long and rich introductory essay on the Sonnet's origins and
development references the Sonnets she reprints. She includes over 600
Sonnets, with a strong sampling from the recent century, as well as great
Sonnets from our heritage. You can see Sir Thomas Wyatt's Sonnets, which
introduced the form to England in the sixteenth century, as well as Chaucer's
glimpse at Sonnets over a century earlier, and the five centuries of work since
Wyatt.
Sonnets: From Dante to the Present (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets), John
Hollander (Editor) . A good anthology of classics from Dante and Petrarch, then
Spenser and Shakespeare, through Milton's "On His Blindness" to Wordsworth
and on to the twentieth century of Elizabeth Bishop and of Philip Larkin's "To
Failure."
The Oxford Book of Sonnets, John Fuller (Editor) . Fuller's essay of
introduction is interesting but too brief to challenge Levine's rich and
illuminating offering. The book contains 328 Sonnets both by skilled and
renowned poets and by lesser known authors. Like other collections, this book
includes Sonnets of love, of politics, and of religion, including sequence Sonnets
(such as Christina Rossetti's 14-sonnet Monna Innominata, A "Sonnet of
Sonnets").

The Making of a Poem: A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms, Edited by Mark


Strand and Eavan Boland.

Books of Poetry Form. Alphabetic list of poetry forms and topics. How to Write Poetry.
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