I learned about a 'sonnet competition' which closes 30/4. The subject is topical, it is the forthcoming royal wedding. I have decided to 'give it a go'
A sonnet structure is as follows -
The Petrarchan sonnet, also known as the Italian sonnet, originated in Italy in the 13th Century and was associated with the Italian poet Francesco Petrarch.
In its basic definition, a sonnet is a rhyming poem of fourteen lines with ten syllables per line, generally written in iambic pentameter meaning there is the rhythm ti-tum; ti-tum; ti-tum. Although there are many different varieties, the two most common variations of sonnets are; the English sonnet- popularised by William Shakespeare, and the Italian sonnet - or the Petrarchan sonnet as it’s commonly known as due to the first major practitioner Francesco Petrarch. In this workshop we focus on the Petrarchan sonnet (the Shakesperean Sonnet is featured separately).
It is a sonnet in its classic form and tends to split into two sections, known as octave (eight-lined stanza) and sestet (six-lined stanza). The octave has two quatrains, rhyming a-b-b-a, a-b-b-a; the first quatrain presents the theme, the second develops it. The sestet is built on two or three different rhymes, arranged either c-d-e-c-d-e or c-d-c-d-c-d or c-d-e-d-c-e; the first three lines reflect on the theme and the last three lines bring the whole poem to a close.
"Blimey", Composing a sonnet is not all that easy,(ti-tum; ti-tum; ti-tum) but after three revisions, following feed back from one of our esteemed NWG members, maybe I will have an entry ready in time !!!
Should YOU want to have a go, email me for the details.
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