Title: The Sestina
1The Sestina
2The Poem
- Sestinas are very difficult to successfully
craft. - Generally the sestina is used to express emotions
about a topic (lyric poem) or to tell a story
(narrative poem). - The difficulty is in the format.
3Format
- The sestina is a poem with a very specific
format. - It is a 39-line long poem.
- It is divided into six 6-line stanzas and one
3-line stanza. - In English, the lines are usually written in
iambic pentameter.
4Composition
- The poet writes the first six-line stanza.
- Then the poet recycles the end words from the
first stanza according to a specific pattern - The end words from the first stanza become the
end words for all the stanzas
5The Pattern
- Assume that the end words for each line
correspond to the letters A, B, C, D, E, and F. - The pattern of end words for the rest of the poem
is found by drawing a spiral through the end
words, beginning at the bottom.
6Stanza 1
Stanza 2
F A E B D C
7Stanza 2
Stanza 3
C F D A B E
F A E B D C
8Stanza 3
Stanza 4
E C B F A D
C F D A B E
9Stanza 4
Stanza 5
D E A C F B
E C B F A D
10Stanza 5
Stanza 6
B D F E C A
D E A C F B
11Stanza 7
- The last stanza uses all of the end words in
three lines. - Half of the end words are used in the middle of
the lines - The other half are used at the end of the lines.
- There are many different possibilities for the
arrangement of the final stanza
12Final Stanza Possible Arrangements
Possibility 1
Possibility 2
Possibility 3
Possibility 4
A D B E C F
A B C D E F
B E C D A F
F E C D A B
13An Example
- The following example has been divided into its
stanzas and each stanza has been labeled for
better viewing. However, usually the poems
stanzas are not labeled.
14- Sestina by Elizabeth Bishop
- Stanza 1
- September rain falls on the house.
- In the failing light, the old grandmother
- sits in the kitchen with the child
- beside the Little Marvel Stove,
- reading the jokes from the almanac,
- laughing and talking to hide her tears.
15Stanza 2She thinks that her equinoctial
tearsand the rain that beats on the roof of the
housewere both foretold by the almanac,but only
known to a grandmother.The iron kettle sings on
the stove.She cuts some bread and says to the
child,
16Stanza 3It's time for tea now but the childis
watching the teakettle's small hard tearsdance
like mad on the hot black stove,the way the rain
must dance on the house.Tidying up, the old
grandmother hangs up the clever almanac
17Stanza 4on its string. Birdlike, the almanac
hovers half open above the child,hovers above
the old grandmotherand her teacup full of dark
brown tears.She shivers and says she thinks the
house feels chilly, and puts more wood in the
stove.
18Stanza 5It was to be, says the Marvel Stove.I
know what I know, says the almanac.With crayons
the child draws a rigid houseand a winding
pathway. Then the childputs in a man with
buttons like tearsand shows it proudly to the
grandmother.
19Stanza 6But secretly, while the
grandmotherbusies herself about the stove,the
little moons fall down like tearsfrom between
the pages of the almanacinto the flower bed the
childhas carefully placed in the front of the
house.
20Stanza 7Time to plant tears, says the
almanac.The grandmother sings to the marvelous
stoveand the child draws another inscrutable
house.
21Some Sestina Sites
- These sites have further explanations and
examples - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sestina
- http//www.public.asu.edu/aarios/formsofverse/rep
orts2000/page9.html - http//www.uni.edu/gotera/CraftOfPoetry/sestina.h
tml