Title: Shakespeare’s Sonnets
1Shakespeares Sonnets
2What is a sonnet?
- The word itself is derived from the Italian word
meaning sonetto, meaning the word, little sound
song - 14 line lyric poem that conforms to strict
patterns of rhythm and rhyme
3Forms of a Sonnet
- Italian
- Petrarchan Sonnet
- 8-line section called the octave
- 6-line section called sestet
- Question- Answer
- Problem- Solution
- Theme- Comment
4Italian Sonnet Petrarchan
- The 9th line is known as the volta, or the
transition - This is the beginning of the sestet
5Shakespearean Sonnet
- Fixed requirement of 14 iambic pentameter lines
- Three quatrains and a couplet
- Quatrain-
- a verse or stanza of four lines, when used in
iambic pentameter it has a rhyme scheme of abab - Couplet-
- A pair of rhyming verse lines
6Iambic Pentameter Review
- Each line has five alternating stressed syllables
with five unstressed syllables - Natural vernacular
- 10 syllables per line in a sonnet
7Rhyme Scheme
- We Dont Know Why
- The twinkling of stars on a balmy night,The
gabble of geese as they take flight,A passionate
look in your lovers eye,The graceful ballet of
a butterfly. - Living on the edge, in a committed way,Facing
all challenges day by day,Your life on the
lineto do, not just try,Life is excitinga
natural high. - By Karl and Joanna Fuchs
8abab form
- Mine eye hath played the painter and hath
stelled, - Thy beauty's form in table of my heart,
- My body is the frame wherein 'tis held,
- And perspective it is best painter's art.
9Shakespearean Sonnet Rhyme Scheme
a b a b c d c d e f e f g g
- As a decrepit father takes delight,To see his
active child do deeds of youth,So I, made lame
by Fortune's dearest spiteTake all my comfort of
thy worth and truth.For whether beauty, birth,
or wealth, or wit,Or any of these all, or all,
or moreEntitled in thy parts, do crowned sit,I
make my love engrafted to this storeSo then I
am not lame, poor, nor despised,Whilst that this
shadow doth such substance give,That I in thy
abundance am sufficed,And by a part of all thy
glory liveLook what is best, that best I wish
in thee,This wish I have, then ten times happy
me.
10First two quatrains
- The question, problem or theme of the sonnet
They that have power to hurt, and will do
none,That do not do the thing, they most do
show,Who moving others, are themselves as
stone,Unmoved, cold, and to temptation
slow They rightly do inherit heaven's
graces,And husband nature's riches from
expense,Tibey are the lords and owners of their
faces,Others, but stewards of their excellence
11The Turn
- First line of the third quatrain
- The speaker is turning from one phrase to another
12The Third Quatrain
- The first line (9) is the turn
- By the end of the third quatrain the initial
comparison and question are no longer used - May hint at the moral
13The Couplet
- The finale of the story
- Often a form of an epigram
- Final words of both lines rhyme
14Couplet Examples
- Yet eyes this cunning want to grace their art,
- They draw but what they see, know not the heart.
15Identifying couplet sections
- They that have power to hurt, and will do
none,That do not do the thing, they most do
show,Who moving others, are themselves as
stone,Unmoved, cold, and to temptation
slowThey rightly do inherit heaven's
graces,And husband nature's riches from
expense,Tibey are the lords and owners of their
faces,Others, but stewards of their
excellenceThe summer's flower is to the summer
sweet,Though to it self, it only live and
die,But if that flower with base infection
meet,The basest weed outbraves his dignityFor
sweetest things turn sourest by their
deeds,Lilies that fester, smell far worse than
weeds
16Themes
- Love, Death, Friendship or the passage of time
- Passage of time growing older, becoming more
mature
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