Sonnet
Although less common today, the sonnet is still used as a form of poetry.
Typical themes deal with spiritual or emotional experiences. There are
two major forms of the sonnet. There are Italian and Elizabethan forms.
Both forms consist of fourteen lines.
The Italian sonnet is divided into an eight-line stanza (named an octave)
and a six-line stanza (named a sestet). The first eight lines were used
to present a problem. The following six lines are used to present a solution
to the problem. The Italian sonnet also has a predictable rhyme scheme.
The octave has a rhyme scheme of ABBAABBA. The sestet follows one of the
following rhyme schemes: CDECDE, CDCCDC, or CDEDCE. Each line typically
has iambic pentameter meter.
The Elizabethan sonnet is divided into four parts. The first three parts
consist of four lines each (called quatrains). The last part consists
of two lines (called a rhyming couplet). The rhyming couplet provides
the conclusion to the theme presented in the three quatrains. The Elizabethan
(also called the Shakespearean sonnet) uses iambic pentameter meter, and
it has a rhyme scheme of ABAB CDCD EFEF GG.
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