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Sonnet | Literary Term | English Literature | Major English | Plus Two Level


Sonnet | Literary Term | English Literature | Major English | Plus Two Level


Sonnet is a distinctive poetic style that uses system or pattern of metrical structure and verse composition usually consisting of fourteen lines, arranged in a set rhyme scheme or pattern. There are two main styles of sonnet, the Italian sonnet and the English sonnet. The Italian or Petrarchan sonnet, named after Petrarch (1304-1374) a fourteenth century writer and the best known poet to use this form, was developed by the Italian poet Guittone of Arezzo (1230-1294) in the thirteenth century. Usually written in iambic pentameter, it consists first of an octave, or eight lines, which asks a question or states a problem or proposition and follows the rhyme scheme abba, abba. The sestet, or last six lines, offers an answer, or a resolution to the proposed problem, and follows the rhyme scheme cde, cde.

 

The English or Shakespearean sonnet was named after William Shakespeare who most believed to the best writer to use the form. Adapting the Italian form to the English, the octave and sestet were replaced by three quatrains, each having its own independent rhyme scheme typically rhyming every other line, and ending with a rhyme couplet. The ending couplet is often the main thought change of the poem, and has a concise ending. It follows the rhyme scheme abab, cdcd, efef, gg. 



 

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