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Class 3
Discussion: Blank Verse: Color Poem
Terms 11-16
Lecture: Rhyme and Rhyme Schemes/
Shakespearian/Petrarchan Sonnets
Guided Writing: Sonnets
The Review
Get in your teams to talk about the terms
below: 5 minutes!

6.Blank Verse
7.Meter
8.Iamb
9.Metaphor
10. Simile
Discussion Subject
  Blank Verse and your color poem
 Read a stanza or two from your poems to the others
  in your group. Identify the conventions used in each.
   Blank verse (iambic pentameter)
   Metaphor/simile
   Alliteration
   Assonance
   Onomatopoeia
   Other?
Terms
 Rhyme
 Feminine Rhyme
 Internal Rhyme
 Slant Rhyme
 Eye Rhyme
 Identical Rhyme
6. Rhyme
 The matching of final vowel or consonant sounds in two
 or more words. The following stanza of "Richard Cory"
 employs alternate rhyme, with the third line rhyming
 with the first and the fourth with the second:

Whenever Richard Cory went down town,
We people on the pavement looked at him;
He was a gentleman from sole to crown
Clean favored and imperially slim.
7. Feminine Rhyme
A rhyme either of two syllables of which the second is
unstressed (double rhyme) as in motion, notion, or of three
syllables of which the second and third are unstressed (triple
rhyme) as in fortunate, importunate. Here is an example
from Sonnet 20 – “A woman's face with nature's own hand”
by William Shakespeare

  A woman's face with Nature's own hand painted
  Hast thou, the master-mistress of my passion;
  A woman's gentle heart, but not acquainted
  With shifting change, as is false women's fashion;
8. Internal Rhymes
Rhyming of two words within the same line of poetry. The
following, for example, is from Edgar Allan Poe’s “The
Raven”:


 Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary,
 Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore,
 While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,
 As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.
 `'Tis some visitor,' I muttered, `tapping at my chamber door -
 Only this, and nothing more.'
9. Slant Rhymes
Slant rhymes are sometimes called imperfect, partial, near,
oblique, or off rhymes. It is rhyme in which two words share
just a vowel sound (assonance – e.g. “heart” and “star”) or in
which they share just a consonant sound (consonance – e.g.
“milk” and “walk”). Slant rhyme is a technique perhaps more
in tune with the uncertainties of the modern age than strong
rhyme. The following example is also from Seamus Heaney’s
“Digging”:

   Between my finger and my thumb
      The squat pen rests; snug as a gun 

10. Eye Rhymes
Rhyme on words that look the same but which are actually pronounced
differently – for example “bough” and “rough.” The opening four lines of
Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18, for example, go:


   Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?
      Thou art more lovely and more temperate:
      Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
      And summer’s lease hath all too short a date:
11. Identical Rhymes
Simply using the same word twice. An example is in (some
versions of) Emily Dickinson’s “Because I Could not Stop for
Death”:


      We paused before a House that seemed
       A Swelling of the Ground—
       The Roof was scarcely visible—
       The Cornice—in the Ground—
bite, kite,
          bright, fight,
          fright, knight,
Marking   night, might,
 Rhyme    right, tight,
          white, write,
Schemes   delight, tonight
How to Mark Rhyme Scheme
• Put an “a" in the right margin after the first line. Then, mark every
  following line that ends rhymes (remember the many different
  kinds of rhyme) with an “a.”
• The first new rhyme sound that occurs after line one gets marked
  with a “b." In all likelihood, this will be line two. Every line that
  rhymes with it also gets the “b" notation.
• Mark every new rhyme with the next letter of the alphabet. Be
  careful not to introduce unnecessary new letters. Check back to
  the beginning of the poem if you think a sound already has a letter
  to identify it.
• Look at the fully marked-up poem. Notice any patterns in the
  rhyming. Determine if the structure identifies a fixed-poem
  structure.
Example of Marking Rhyme Scheme
   Stanza Two from “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe
• Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak
  December,                                            a
  And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost
  upon the floor.                                      b
  Eagerly I wished the morrow; - vainly I had sought
  to borrow                                            c
  From my books surcease of sorrow - sorrow for
  the lost Lenore -                                    b
  For the rare and radiant maiden whom the angels
  named Lenore                                         b
• -Nameless here for evermore.                         b
I THINK that I shall never see             a
A poem lovely as a tree.                   a
                                                “Trees”
A tree whose hungry mouth is prest         b    Joyce Kilmer
Against the sweet earth's flowing breast   b

A tree that looks at God all day 5         c
And lifts her leafy arms to pray;          c   These are examples of
                                               couplets
A tree that may in summer wear             d
A nest of robins in her hair;              d

Upon whose bosom snow has lain;            e
Who intimately lives with rain. 10         e

Poems are made by fools like me,           f
But only God can make a tree.              f
Only until This Cigarette is Ended
Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950)
                                                 Let’s do
Only until this cigarette is ended,              this one
A little moment at the end of all,
While on the floor the quiet ashes fall,         together
And in the firelight to a lance extended,
Bizarrely with the jazzing music blended,
The broken shadow dances on the wall,
I will permit my memory to recall
The vision of you, by all my dreams attended.
And then adieu,--farewell!--the dream is done.
Yours is a face of which I can forget
The colour and the features, every one,
The words not ever, and the smiles not yet;
But in your day this moment is the sun
Upon a hill, after the sun has set.
Spenser   Petrarch          Shakespeare




                     Writing Sonnets
Sonnet Conventions
•   14 lines
•   Strict rhyme scheme
•   Specific structure
•   We’re going to talk about three specific types
     o Shakespearean (English)
     o Petrarchan (Italian)
     o Spenserian
Shakespearian                                  Spenserian
•   Form: 14 lines: three quatrains           •   Form: 14 lines: three quatrains
    followed by a couplet.                        followed by a couplet.
•   Content: It is essential that a sonnet    •   Content: It is essential that a sonnet
    contain a “turn” or “volta.” Often the        contain a “turn” or “volta.” Often the
    first two quatrains explain a problem         first two quatrains explain a problem
    or ask a question. The last quatrain          or ask a question. The last quatrain
    and the couplet offer a solution to           and the couplet offer a solution to
    the problem or an answer to the               the problem or an answer to the
    question. Sometimes this does not             question. Sometimes this does not
    occur until the final couplet, where it       occur until the final couplet, where it
    is a commentary on the previous 12            is a commentary on the previous 12
    lines.                                        lines.
•   Meter: Iambic pentameter                  •   Meter: Iambic pentameter
      o Unstressed, stressed pattern                o Unstressed, stressed pattern
            • Detroit Five feet (10                       • Detroit Five feet (10
              syllables)                                    syllables)
•   Rhyme scheme:                             •   Rhyme scheme:
      o abab, cdcd, efef, gg                        o abab, bcbc, cdcd, ee
Petrarchan
• Form: 14 lines: octave and a sestet
• Content: The octave forms proposition that describes problem, asks
  question, or sets situation. The sestet proposes turn or resolution.
• Meter: Iambic pentameter
   o Unstressed, stressed pattern
       • Detroit Five feet (10 syllables)
• Rhyme scheme:
• octave:
   o abba abba
• Rhyme scheme for sestet:
   o Can be arranged in various ways:
      cdcdcd cdccdc
      cdecde cdcdee
Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate.
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
                                                   Sonnet 18
And summer’s lease hath all too short a date.
                                                   William Shakespeare
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimmed,
And every fair from fair sometime declines,
By chance or nature’s changing course untrimmed;
But thy eternal summer shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st,
Nor shall death brag thou wander’st in his shade
When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st.
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
Shakespearean Sonnet Form and Structure

Iambic
_________
pentameter
_________    Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?            A

             Thou art more lovely and more temperate.           B

             Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, A        Quatrain

             And summer’s lease hath all too short a date.      B
                                                                               octave
             Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,         C
             And often is his gold complexion dimmed,           D

             And every fair from fair sometime declines,        C   Quatrain
                                                           D
             By chance or nature’s changing course untrimmed;
Volta
__________ But thy eternal summer shall not fade                E
                                                                F
             Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st,           Quatrain
             Nor shall death brag thou wander’st in his shade
                                                                E
                                                                               sestet
             When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st.        F

             So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,        G
14 Lines!                                                       G    Couplet
             So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
The Subject
Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate:



• The speaker starts by asking whether he should compare
  his subject to with a summer’s day. Then, instead of
  considering that further, he gives us a thesis of sorts. The
  object of his description is more "lovely" and more
  "temperate" than a summer’s day.
Lines 3-8
• Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
  And summer’s lease hath all too short a date:
  Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
  And often is his gold complexion dimm’d;

• These line focus on a personification of nature, explaining
  the cycles of life and details of summer.
Lines 7-8
• And every fair from fair sometime declines,
  By chance, or nature’s changing course
  untrimm’d;


• With these lines, the speaker gets even broader in his
  philosophy, declaring that everything beautiful must
  eventually fade away and lose its charm, either by chance
  or by the natural flow of time.
The Turn: Lines 9-10

• But thy eternal summer shall not fade,
  Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st,

• Here is a classic example of a "turn." Suddenly (though it
  was foreshadowed a bit in line 8), the tone and direction of
  the poem change dramatically: the speaker pronounces
  that the person he’s speaking to isn’t subject to all of these
  rules of nature. The speaker argues that, unlike the real
  summer, his beloved’s summer will never end nor will
  his/her beauty ever fade.
Lines 11-14
Nor shall death brag thou wander’st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st;
So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.

Shakespeare shatters the fourth wall and successfully
predicts that this poem will continue to be read, analyzed, and
re-analyzed for all time. In other words, by allowing us to try
to give life to "thee" (figuring out who he/she was), the
speaker and the poem itself give "thee" life.
Amoretti LXX: Fresh spring the herald of loves mighty king   The Spenserian
                                                             Sonnet

                                                             The quatrains are
                                                             addressed to spring,
                                                             who Spencer asks
                                                             to stir his love to
                                                             action
                                                             In this last couplet,
                                                             the speaker changes
                                                             from addressing
                                                             spring to addressing
                                                             his beloved. He tells
                                                             her to hurry up while
                                                             the times is still
                                                             "prime" (spring),
                                                             because you cannot
                                                             get back the time that
                                                             you have wasted.
John Donne: Petrarchan Sonnet
72. "Death be not proud, though some have called thee"

                                    a
                                    b
                                    b
                                    a          Octave
                                    a
                                    b
                                    b
                                    a
                                    c
                                    d
                                    d           Sestet
                                    c
                                    a
                                    a
The Turn (Volta)
• Like the Shakespearian and Spenserian convention, a Petrarchan
  sonnet has a shift, or "turn," in the argument or subject matter
  somewhere in the poem. Usually, the turn occurs at line 9 to
  coincide with the introduction of a new rhyme scheme. We are
  presented there with a logical or emotional shift by which the
  speaker enables himself to take a new or altered or enlarged view
  of his subject.
• The volta, though not the sharpest turn in sonnets, comes when
  Donne addresses Fate and Chance. While people often assume we
  are slaves to Death, Donne points out that Fate and Chance
  enslave him. At this point Donne no longer suggests Death lose his
  arrogance, but boasts of the worthlessness and foolishness of
  Death.
• If you want to rebel, you can argue that the real turn doesn’t
  happen until the middle of the last line, when Donne drops this
  shocker: "Death, thou shalt die.”
Guided
Writing
HOW TO WRITE A SONNET
1. Decide the purpose and audience of the sonnet.
2. Choose a specific topic (not the title, yet).
3. List things you could say about your topic.
4. Find a relationship between the ideas, audience
and purpose.
5. Write down a 14-line sequence of statements.
6. Convert the 14 lines into rhyming iambic
pentameter.
7. Note specific problem areas.
8. Edit the sonnet.
9. Choose a title.
Revised from Katherine Beckett’s “How to write a sonnet” http://www.calligraphy-
skills.com/how-to-write-a-sonnet.html
1. Decide the Purpose and Audience of
                the Sonnet.
 Start by deciding the purpose the sonnet must serve and the
  audience it’s intended for. Forget for just a moment about how
  to write the sonnet. Think instead about who's going to read it
  and what effect you want it to have on them.

 EXAMPLE: Write a sonnet as a Mother’s Day gift. The purpose
  is to make mom feel a warm glow on Mother's Day. Audience
  is Mom.

 Perhaps your sonnet is just for you to read. It will still be read
  by a different you at a different time. What is it that you want
  to make yourself think, feel, or remember when you read it?
2: Choose a specific topic
 Specific, definite, limited topics are good because a sonnet is a short poem.

 Almost any topic can be made to serve your purpose and audience. Since a
  sonnet has to show some movement and change anyway, it’s often useful
  to start in a different place from where you think you might end up.

 EXAMPLE: if you decide to write a sonnet only on the topic of ‘my mom,’
  you will end up with a description of her, or a set of memories, or
  something similar – it will be a motionless poem in that it will simply circle
  about on the same topic.

 But if you try to write a sonnet with more motion in its subject matter, by
  starting with Mom and then moving on, your sonnet will end up on a topic
  other than her. You want it to end about her. So start with something that
  isn’t your mom, and then you can move the subject of the sonnet on to her.
Choosing a Topic
 You don't have to pick a minutely focused topic at random --
  but it will probably help to choose a topic that is only loosely
  connected with your more general subject-matter, if it's
  connected at all. Think of Shakespeare writing about his
  beloved; his immediate topic is actually how he isn't going to
  compare her with a summer's day.

 For example, you could choose a topic as random as a Persian
  rug.
3: Find Things to Say
 This stage of writing a sonnet has nothing to do with rhyme or
  rhythm. You’re just jotting down what you think about the
  subject (the Persian rug), especially any points that you feel
  might be relevant to your audience (your mom) and purpose
  (to make mom feel a warm glow on Mother's Day).
 Around eight to twelve ideas should give you enough to get an
  idea of how to write the sonnet. Fewer and you might run out
  of material; more and it may be hard to focus. You need enough
  ideas to find some kind of connection between them in the
  next step.
 Don't try to only think of good ideas. Just write them down as
  they come. You will be amazed what turns out to be useful.
4: Find a Relationship between the Elements
 Imagine how your ideas might link to each other. You want to
  find some background relationship between (a) the specific
  topic you’ve chosen and (b) its purpose and audience.
 Play around with different ideas and structures and don’t be
  afraid to discard anything you’re not entirely happy with.
 EXAMPLE: similarities between a Persian rug and mom:
    age, gets better with time, love etc. Start by working out how to write a
     sonnet to the rug (‘Ode to a Carpet') and then twist it around from the
     ninth line to be really addressed to Mom.
Relationship between the Elements (continued)

 Link your concept to feelings from home or other reminder of
  mom: welcoming: she talks and listens, offers good food, has a
  sense of humor, plenty of patience and a talent for making
  people feel comfortable. The rug might evoke those sorts of
  ideas: warmth, friendliness, goodness, belonging.

 This is an important part of how to write a sonnet as it
  establishes the background theme. Now, fish for any divine
  inspiration. But, if there isn't any, logic will do just as well;
  direct comparison and contrast are time-honored devices; or
  some sort of pun or twist may hold the subjects together.
  There just has to be some sort of link.
5: Write a sequence of ideas in
            14 lines
 Write 14 lines, each line of which expresses an idea about
  roughly what you want to say. (The poem doesn’t have to
  rhyme or keep to a beat yet.)

 EXAMPLE: Jot down four ideas about the first topic for the first
  four lines (or quatrain).

 Here they are for the Persian rug:
    My rug goes with me everywhere – wherever I go, I take it. It makes me feel
     good to look at it with its red, brown and white roses-and-daisies pattern. I like
     to imagine the person who wove it thinking (in Persian): That was probably
     about sixty years ago, maybe even a little more.
Sequence of Ideas (continued)
 Now, in the second quatrain, develop that initial theme by
  saying more about the colors in the rug:

    EX: Anyway, here it is still, my rug, making my home for me in the here
     and now. I remember the carpet-seller told me about the dyes they used
     to use in those days. They were all from nature: indigo, walnuts,
     madder, with plain cotton for white. He said, the color from these dyes
     gets softer and brighter with time.
Sequence of Ideas (continued)
 At the ninth line, which is where the ‘volta’ or 'turn' takes
  place, shift the perspective, idea, subject.)

    EX: It’s true, you know, and you’re the same, you get better and better
     as years pass. The more I live, the more I appreciate what makes me feel
     warm and happy. When I see you again no matter after how long it feels
     good to be at home with you. Even though I make my own home where
     my rug is, you’re the real thing.

 Note the movement from rug to mom. Remember, this turn is
  an essential convention of the sonnet.
Sequence of Ideas (continued)
 Now you need to write the last two lines. Think about how to
  wrap up your poem, still thinking about your purpose,
  audience, topic, and connections!

    EX: If I were Persian, I’d have a bone-china tea-pot painted with roses
     and daisies. Something warm and lovely from far away to remind me
     you’re always close.

 This is awfully sweet, perhaps, but it brings together the ideas
  so far.

 There we are: fourteen lines on a Persian rug and mom.
6: Convert the 14 Lines to Rhyming Iambic Pentameter



 This is the most demanding part of writing a sonnet: working your
  fourteen lines of raw material into rhyming iambic pentameter.

 Choose your rhyme-scheme now. Not the actual rhyming words, just
  the pattern of rhymes you want to work with. Remember,
  Shakespearian sonnets go abab cdcd efef gg; Spenserian sonnets go
  abab bcbc cdcd ee; Petrarchan sonnets often go abbaabba
  cdecde/cdccdc/cdecde/cdcdee

 You are about to sacrifice some parts of your text, add to other parts,
  move ideas around and perhaps bend the grammar a little. You
  might even scrap some sections and start them again.
7: Read Through The Work So Far, Noting
          Any Problem Areas

  By now you should have fourteen rhythmic, rhyming lines.
   It’s time to put everything together and read it
   through, trying to look at it objectively, as though someone
   else was learning how to write a sonnet and you were
   helping them improve it.

  It will help to read it out loud.
Example with possible comments on problem
                                               areas
1 Wherever I go, my Persian rug goes too.
2 I love its abstract roses-and-daisies design.
3 It’s more than six decades now since it was new,*
4 And its weaver thought, “I’m proud to call this mine.”**
5 Now it means my home wherever I go,
6 Warm with walnut, indigo and madder dye.
7 The seller said, “Age makes such colors glow***
8 Softer and brighter as the years go by.”
9 And you – have you got better, or have I
10 Better learned to recognize good things?
11 What is my rug, except to signify****
12 The warmth and gladness that your welcome brings?
13 Perhaps my weaver kept a Wedgwood plate*****
14 And smiled to think of Mum each time he ate.

   *Third line – awkward rhythm, too long.
   **Fourth line – ‘And’ is too sudden, doesn’t link up with the previous line well, and in fact the
    whole line is clunky-sounding.
   ***Line 7 – I don’t like ‘Age’ and ‘glow’ there; they stick out somehow. I think I must have meant
    ‘grow’. And I’m not sure about the seller’s direct speech. It is too dominant for the tiny walk-on
    part he plays in this sonnet.
   ****Line 11 – it sounds really pretentiously philosophical to ask ‘What is my rug, except …’!
   *****Line 13 - ‘My weaver’ seems odd.
8: edit the sonnet to create a final draft
 You know how to write a sonnet. You almost have a sonnet.
  At this point it's easy to get impatient. But it can still help a
  great deal to put the sonnet aside for a few hours in order
  to get a fresh impression of it on re-reading.

 Your goal during the editing stage is to trim and shape the
  sonnet so it flows more smoothly and clearly, less
  awkwardly, more rhythmically.
9: Choose a Title
 There are very few if any rules for giving titles to sonnets.
  An expressive title adds another dimension and can even
  alter or enhance the whole meaning of the poem. The title
  should ideally be a word or phrase that helps to add new
  meaning or depth to your sonnet.
10: The Finished Product
Good Things
Wherever I go, my Persian rug goes too.
I love its abstract roses-and-daisies design.
More than sixty years ago, brand-new,
It made its weaver proud to say, “That’s mine.”
Now it makes my home wherever I go,
Warm with walnut, indigo and madder dye.
The seller showed me how such colors grow
Softer and brighter as the years go by.
And you – have you got better, or have I
Better learned to recognize good things?
I like to think my rug could signify
The kind of warmth your welcome presence brings.
Perhaps that weaver kept a Wedgwood plate
And smiled to think of Mum each time he ate.

• Katherine Scarfe Beckett
Homework
• Post #3: Sonnet: Shakespearian,
  Petrarchan, or Spenserian
• Reading: Sestina/Villanelle
• Study Terms 1-16

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Ewrt 30 class 3

  • 2. Discussion: Blank Verse: Color Poem Terms 11-16 Lecture: Rhyme and Rhyme Schemes/ Shakespearian/Petrarchan Sonnets Guided Writing: Sonnets
  • 3. The Review Get in your teams to talk about the terms below: 5 minutes! 6.Blank Verse 7.Meter 8.Iamb 9.Metaphor 10. Simile
  • 4. Discussion Subject Blank Verse and your color poem  Read a stanza or two from your poems to the others in your group. Identify the conventions used in each.  Blank verse (iambic pentameter)  Metaphor/simile  Alliteration  Assonance  Onomatopoeia  Other?
  • 5. Terms Rhyme Feminine Rhyme Internal Rhyme Slant Rhyme Eye Rhyme Identical Rhyme
  • 6. 6. Rhyme The matching of final vowel or consonant sounds in two or more words. The following stanza of "Richard Cory" employs alternate rhyme, with the third line rhyming with the first and the fourth with the second: Whenever Richard Cory went down town, We people on the pavement looked at him; He was a gentleman from sole to crown Clean favored and imperially slim.
  • 7. 7. Feminine Rhyme A rhyme either of two syllables of which the second is unstressed (double rhyme) as in motion, notion, or of three syllables of which the second and third are unstressed (triple rhyme) as in fortunate, importunate. Here is an example from Sonnet 20 – “A woman's face with nature's own hand” by William Shakespeare A woman's face with Nature's own hand painted Hast thou, the master-mistress of my passion; A woman's gentle heart, but not acquainted With shifting change, as is false women's fashion;
  • 8. 8. Internal Rhymes Rhyming of two words within the same line of poetry. The following, for example, is from Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven”: Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary, Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore, While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping, As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door. `'Tis some visitor,' I muttered, `tapping at my chamber door - Only this, and nothing more.'
  • 9. 9. Slant Rhymes Slant rhymes are sometimes called imperfect, partial, near, oblique, or off rhymes. It is rhyme in which two words share just a vowel sound (assonance – e.g. “heart” and “star”) or in which they share just a consonant sound (consonance – e.g. “milk” and “walk”). Slant rhyme is a technique perhaps more in tune with the uncertainties of the modern age than strong rhyme. The following example is also from Seamus Heaney’s “Digging”: Between my finger and my thumb The squat pen rests; snug as a gun 

  • 10. 10. Eye Rhymes Rhyme on words that look the same but which are actually pronounced differently – for example “bough” and “rough.” The opening four lines of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18, for example, go: Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate: Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, And summer’s lease hath all too short a date:
  • 11. 11. Identical Rhymes Simply using the same word twice. An example is in (some versions of) Emily Dickinson’s “Because I Could not Stop for Death”: We paused before a House that seemed A Swelling of the Ground— The Roof was scarcely visible— The Cornice—in the Ground—
  • 12. bite, kite, bright, fight, fright, knight, Marking night, might, Rhyme right, tight, white, write, Schemes delight, tonight
  • 13. How to Mark Rhyme Scheme • Put an “a" in the right margin after the first line. Then, mark every following line that ends rhymes (remember the many different kinds of rhyme) with an “a.” • The first new rhyme sound that occurs after line one gets marked with a “b." In all likelihood, this will be line two. Every line that rhymes with it also gets the “b" notation. • Mark every new rhyme with the next letter of the alphabet. Be careful not to introduce unnecessary new letters. Check back to the beginning of the poem if you think a sound already has a letter to identify it. • Look at the fully marked-up poem. Notice any patterns in the rhyming. Determine if the structure identifies a fixed-poem structure.
  • 14. Example of Marking Rhyme Scheme Stanza Two from “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe • Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December, a And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor. b Eagerly I wished the morrow; - vainly I had sought to borrow c From my books surcease of sorrow - sorrow for the lost Lenore - b For the rare and radiant maiden whom the angels named Lenore b • -Nameless here for evermore. b
  • 15. I THINK that I shall never see a A poem lovely as a tree. a “Trees” A tree whose hungry mouth is prest b Joyce Kilmer Against the sweet earth's flowing breast b A tree that looks at God all day 5 c And lifts her leafy arms to pray; c These are examples of couplets A tree that may in summer wear d A nest of robins in her hair; d Upon whose bosom snow has lain; e Who intimately lives with rain. 10 e Poems are made by fools like me, f But only God can make a tree. f
  • 16. Only until This Cigarette is Ended Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950) Let’s do Only until this cigarette is ended, this one A little moment at the end of all, While on the floor the quiet ashes fall, together And in the firelight to a lance extended, Bizarrely with the jazzing music blended, The broken shadow dances on the wall, I will permit my memory to recall The vision of you, by all my dreams attended. And then adieu,--farewell!--the dream is done. Yours is a face of which I can forget The colour and the features, every one, The words not ever, and the smiles not yet; But in your day this moment is the sun Upon a hill, after the sun has set.
  • 17. Spenser Petrarch Shakespeare Writing Sonnets
  • 18. Sonnet Conventions • 14 lines • Strict rhyme scheme • Specific structure • We’re going to talk about three specific types o Shakespearean (English) o Petrarchan (Italian) o Spenserian
  • 19. Shakespearian Spenserian • Form: 14 lines: three quatrains • Form: 14 lines: three quatrains followed by a couplet. followed by a couplet. • Content: It is essential that a sonnet • Content: It is essential that a sonnet contain a “turn” or “volta.” Often the contain a “turn” or “volta.” Often the first two quatrains explain a problem first two quatrains explain a problem or ask a question. The last quatrain or ask a question. The last quatrain and the couplet offer a solution to and the couplet offer a solution to the problem or an answer to the the problem or an answer to the question. Sometimes this does not question. Sometimes this does not occur until the final couplet, where it occur until the final couplet, where it is a commentary on the previous 12 is a commentary on the previous 12 lines. lines. • Meter: Iambic pentameter • Meter: Iambic pentameter o Unstressed, stressed pattern o Unstressed, stressed pattern • Detroit Five feet (10 • Detroit Five feet (10 syllables) syllables) • Rhyme scheme: • Rhyme scheme: o abab, cdcd, efef, gg o abab, bcbc, cdcd, ee
  • 20. Petrarchan • Form: 14 lines: octave and a sestet • Content: The octave forms proposition that describes problem, asks question, or sets situation. The sestet proposes turn or resolution. • Meter: Iambic pentameter o Unstressed, stressed pattern • Detroit Five feet (10 syllables) • Rhyme scheme: • octave: o abba abba • Rhyme scheme for sestet: o Can be arranged in various ways: cdcdcd cdccdc cdecde cdcdee
  • 21. Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate. Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, Sonnet 18 And summer’s lease hath all too short a date. William Shakespeare Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines, And often is his gold complexion dimmed, And every fair from fair sometime declines, By chance or nature’s changing course untrimmed; But thy eternal summer shall not fade Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st, Nor shall death brag thou wander’st in his shade When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st. So long as men can breathe or eyes can see, So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
  • 22. Shakespearean Sonnet Form and Structure Iambic _________ pentameter _________ Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day? A Thou art more lovely and more temperate. B Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, A Quatrain And summer’s lease hath all too short a date. B octave Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines, C And often is his gold complexion dimmed, D And every fair from fair sometime declines, C Quatrain D By chance or nature’s changing course untrimmed; Volta __________ But thy eternal summer shall not fade E F Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st, Quatrain Nor shall death brag thou wander’st in his shade E sestet When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st. F So long as men can breathe or eyes can see, G 14 Lines! G Couplet So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
  • 23. The Subject Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate: • The speaker starts by asking whether he should compare his subject to with a summer’s day. Then, instead of considering that further, he gives us a thesis of sorts. The object of his description is more "lovely" and more "temperate" than a summer’s day.
  • 24. Lines 3-8 • Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, And summer’s lease hath all too short a date: Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines, And often is his gold complexion dimm’d; • These line focus on a personification of nature, explaining the cycles of life and details of summer.
  • 25. Lines 7-8 • And every fair from fair sometime declines, By chance, or nature’s changing course untrimm’d; • With these lines, the speaker gets even broader in his philosophy, declaring that everything beautiful must eventually fade away and lose its charm, either by chance or by the natural flow of time.
  • 26. The Turn: Lines 9-10 • But thy eternal summer shall not fade, Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st, • Here is a classic example of a "turn." Suddenly (though it was foreshadowed a bit in line 8), the tone and direction of the poem change dramatically: the speaker pronounces that the person he’s speaking to isn’t subject to all of these rules of nature. The speaker argues that, unlike the real summer, his beloved’s summer will never end nor will his/her beauty ever fade.
  • 27. Lines 11-14 Nor shall death brag thou wander’st in his shade, When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st; So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see, So long lives this, and this gives life to thee. Shakespeare shatters the fourth wall and successfully predicts that this poem will continue to be read, analyzed, and re-analyzed for all time. In other words, by allowing us to try to give life to "thee" (figuring out who he/she was), the speaker and the poem itself give "thee" life.
  • 28. Amoretti LXX: Fresh spring the herald of loves mighty king The Spenserian Sonnet The quatrains are addressed to spring, who Spencer asks to stir his love to action In this last couplet, the speaker changes from addressing spring to addressing his beloved. He tells her to hurry up while the times is still "prime" (spring), because you cannot get back the time that you have wasted.
  • 29. John Donne: Petrarchan Sonnet 72. "Death be not proud, though some have called thee" a b b a Octave a b b a c d d Sestet c a a
  • 30. The Turn (Volta) • Like the Shakespearian and Spenserian convention, a Petrarchan sonnet has a shift, or "turn," in the argument or subject matter somewhere in the poem. Usually, the turn occurs at line 9 to coincide with the introduction of a new rhyme scheme. We are presented there with a logical or emotional shift by which the speaker enables himself to take a new or altered or enlarged view of his subject. • The volta, though not the sharpest turn in sonnets, comes when Donne addresses Fate and Chance. While people often assume we are slaves to Death, Donne points out that Fate and Chance enslave him. At this point Donne no longer suggests Death lose his arrogance, but boasts of the worthlessness and foolishness of Death. • If you want to rebel, you can argue that the real turn doesn’t happen until the middle of the last line, when Donne drops this shocker: "Death, thou shalt die.”
  • 32. HOW TO WRITE A SONNET 1. Decide the purpose and audience of the sonnet. 2. Choose a specific topic (not the title, yet). 3. List things you could say about your topic. 4. Find a relationship between the ideas, audience and purpose. 5. Write down a 14-line sequence of statements. 6. Convert the 14 lines into rhyming iambic pentameter. 7. Note specific problem areas. 8. Edit the sonnet. 9. Choose a title. Revised from Katherine Beckett’s “How to write a sonnet” http://www.calligraphy- skills.com/how-to-write-a-sonnet.html
  • 33. 1. Decide the Purpose and Audience of the Sonnet.  Start by deciding the purpose the sonnet must serve and the audience it’s intended for. Forget for just a moment about how to write the sonnet. Think instead about who's going to read it and what effect you want it to have on them.  EXAMPLE: Write a sonnet as a Mother’s Day gift. The purpose is to make mom feel a warm glow on Mother's Day. Audience is Mom.  Perhaps your sonnet is just for you to read. It will still be read by a different you at a different time. What is it that you want to make yourself think, feel, or remember when you read it?
  • 34. 2: Choose a specific topic  Specific, definite, limited topics are good because a sonnet is a short poem.  Almost any topic can be made to serve your purpose and audience. Since a sonnet has to show some movement and change anyway, it’s often useful to start in a different place from where you think you might end up.  EXAMPLE: if you decide to write a sonnet only on the topic of ‘my mom,’ you will end up with a description of her, or a set of memories, or something similar – it will be a motionless poem in that it will simply circle about on the same topic.  But if you try to write a sonnet with more motion in its subject matter, by starting with Mom and then moving on, your sonnet will end up on a topic other than her. You want it to end about her. So start with something that isn’t your mom, and then you can move the subject of the sonnet on to her.
  • 35. Choosing a Topic  You don't have to pick a minutely focused topic at random -- but it will probably help to choose a topic that is only loosely connected with your more general subject-matter, if it's connected at all. Think of Shakespeare writing about his beloved; his immediate topic is actually how he isn't going to compare her with a summer's day.  For example, you could choose a topic as random as a Persian rug.
  • 36. 3: Find Things to Say  This stage of writing a sonnet has nothing to do with rhyme or rhythm. You’re just jotting down what you think about the subject (the Persian rug), especially any points that you feel might be relevant to your audience (your mom) and purpose (to make mom feel a warm glow on Mother's Day).  Around eight to twelve ideas should give you enough to get an idea of how to write the sonnet. Fewer and you might run out of material; more and it may be hard to focus. You need enough ideas to find some kind of connection between them in the next step.  Don't try to only think of good ideas. Just write them down as they come. You will be amazed what turns out to be useful.
  • 37. 4: Find a Relationship between the Elements  Imagine how your ideas might link to each other. You want to find some background relationship between (a) the specific topic you’ve chosen and (b) its purpose and audience.  Play around with different ideas and structures and don’t be afraid to discard anything you’re not entirely happy with.  EXAMPLE: similarities between a Persian rug and mom:  age, gets better with time, love etc. Start by working out how to write a sonnet to the rug (‘Ode to a Carpet') and then twist it around from the ninth line to be really addressed to Mom.
  • 38. Relationship between the Elements (continued)  Link your concept to feelings from home or other reminder of mom: welcoming: she talks and listens, offers good food, has a sense of humor, plenty of patience and a talent for making people feel comfortable. The rug might evoke those sorts of ideas: warmth, friendliness, goodness, belonging.  This is an important part of how to write a sonnet as it establishes the background theme. Now, fish for any divine inspiration. But, if there isn't any, logic will do just as well; direct comparison and contrast are time-honored devices; or some sort of pun or twist may hold the subjects together. There just has to be some sort of link.
  • 39. 5: Write a sequence of ideas in 14 lines  Write 14 lines, each line of which expresses an idea about roughly what you want to say. (The poem doesn’t have to rhyme or keep to a beat yet.)  EXAMPLE: Jot down four ideas about the first topic for the first four lines (or quatrain).  Here they are for the Persian rug:  My rug goes with me everywhere – wherever I go, I take it. It makes me feel good to look at it with its red, brown and white roses-and-daisies pattern. I like to imagine the person who wove it thinking (in Persian): That was probably about sixty years ago, maybe even a little more.
  • 40. Sequence of Ideas (continued)  Now, in the second quatrain, develop that initial theme by saying more about the colors in the rug:  EX: Anyway, here it is still, my rug, making my home for me in the here and now. I remember the carpet-seller told me about the dyes they used to use in those days. They were all from nature: indigo, walnuts, madder, with plain cotton for white. He said, the color from these dyes gets softer and brighter with time.
  • 41. Sequence of Ideas (continued)  At the ninth line, which is where the ‘volta’ or 'turn' takes place, shift the perspective, idea, subject.)  EX: It’s true, you know, and you’re the same, you get better and better as years pass. The more I live, the more I appreciate what makes me feel warm and happy. When I see you again no matter after how long it feels good to be at home with you. Even though I make my own home where my rug is, you’re the real thing.  Note the movement from rug to mom. Remember, this turn is an essential convention of the sonnet.
  • 42. Sequence of Ideas (continued)  Now you need to write the last two lines. Think about how to wrap up your poem, still thinking about your purpose, audience, topic, and connections!  EX: If I were Persian, I’d have a bone-china tea-pot painted with roses and daisies. Something warm and lovely from far away to remind me you’re always close.  This is awfully sweet, perhaps, but it brings together the ideas so far.  There we are: fourteen lines on a Persian rug and mom.
  • 43. 6: Convert the 14 Lines to Rhyming Iambic Pentameter  This is the most demanding part of writing a sonnet: working your fourteen lines of raw material into rhyming iambic pentameter.  Choose your rhyme-scheme now. Not the actual rhyming words, just the pattern of rhymes you want to work with. Remember, Shakespearian sonnets go abab cdcd efef gg; Spenserian sonnets go abab bcbc cdcd ee; Petrarchan sonnets often go abbaabba cdecde/cdccdc/cdecde/cdcdee  You are about to sacrifice some parts of your text, add to other parts, move ideas around and perhaps bend the grammar a little. You might even scrap some sections and start them again.
  • 44. 7: Read Through The Work So Far, Noting Any Problem Areas  By now you should have fourteen rhythmic, rhyming lines. It’s time to put everything together and read it through, trying to look at it objectively, as though someone else was learning how to write a sonnet and you were helping them improve it.  It will help to read it out loud.
  • 45. Example with possible comments on problem areas 1 Wherever I go, my Persian rug goes too. 2 I love its abstract roses-and-daisies design. 3 It’s more than six decades now since it was new,* 4 And its weaver thought, “I’m proud to call this mine.”** 5 Now it means my home wherever I go, 6 Warm with walnut, indigo and madder dye. 7 The seller said, “Age makes such colors glow*** 8 Softer and brighter as the years go by.” 9 And you – have you got better, or have I 10 Better learned to recognize good things? 11 What is my rug, except to signify**** 12 The warmth and gladness that your welcome brings? 13 Perhaps my weaver kept a Wedgwood plate***** 14 And smiled to think of Mum each time he ate.  *Third line – awkward rhythm, too long.  **Fourth line – ‘And’ is too sudden, doesn’t link up with the previous line well, and in fact the whole line is clunky-sounding.  ***Line 7 – I don’t like ‘Age’ and ‘glow’ there; they stick out somehow. I think I must have meant ‘grow’. And I’m not sure about the seller’s direct speech. It is too dominant for the tiny walk-on part he plays in this sonnet.  ****Line 11 – it sounds really pretentiously philosophical to ask ‘What is my rug, except …’!  *****Line 13 - ‘My weaver’ seems odd.
  • 46. 8: edit the sonnet to create a final draft  You know how to write a sonnet. You almost have a sonnet. At this point it's easy to get impatient. But it can still help a great deal to put the sonnet aside for a few hours in order to get a fresh impression of it on re-reading.  Your goal during the editing stage is to trim and shape the sonnet so it flows more smoothly and clearly, less awkwardly, more rhythmically.
  • 47. 9: Choose a Title  There are very few if any rules for giving titles to sonnets. An expressive title adds another dimension and can even alter or enhance the whole meaning of the poem. The title should ideally be a word or phrase that helps to add new meaning or depth to your sonnet.
  • 48. 10: The Finished Product Good Things Wherever I go, my Persian rug goes too. I love its abstract roses-and-daisies design. More than sixty years ago, brand-new, It made its weaver proud to say, “That’s mine.” Now it makes my home wherever I go, Warm with walnut, indigo and madder dye. The seller showed me how such colors grow Softer and brighter as the years go by. And you – have you got better, or have I Better learned to recognize good things? I like to think my rug could signify The kind of warmth your welcome presence brings. Perhaps that weaver kept a Wedgwood plate And smiled to think of Mum each time he ate. • Katherine Scarfe Beckett
  • 49. Homework • Post #3: Sonnet: Shakespearian, Petrarchan, or Spenserian • Reading: Sestina/Villanelle • Study Terms 1-16