Essay on "Sonnet"_Literary forms & Criticism
Unit-I
Poetry
“Sonnet”
A lyric poem consisting of a single stanza of fourteen iambic pentameter lines linked by an
intricate rhyme scheme. A 14-line poem with a variable rhyme scheme originating
in Italy and brought to England by Sir Thomas Wyatt and
Henry Howard, earl of Surrey in the 16th century. Literally a “little
song,” the sonnet traditionally reflects upon a single sentiment, with a
clarification or “turn” of thought in its concluding lines.
Function of
Sonnet
The sonnet has become popular among different poets because
it has a great adaptability to different purposes and requirements. Rhythms are
strictly followed. It could be a perfect poetic style for elaboration or
expression of a single feeling or thought with its short length in iambic pentameter.
In fact, it gives an ideal laboratory to a poet for exploration of strong
emotions. Due to its short length, it is easy to manage for both the writer and
the reader.
There are
two major patterns of rhyme in sonnets written in the English language:
1. The Italian or Petrarchan sonnet (named after the
fourteenth-century Italian poet Petrarch) falls into two main parts: an octave (eight lines) rhyming abbaabba
followed by a sestet (six lines) rhyming cdecde or some variant, such as cdccdc. Petrarch’s sonnets were first imitated in
England, in both their stanza form and their standard subject—the hopes and
pains of an adoring male lover—by Sir Thomas Wyatt in
the early sixteenth century. The Petrarchan form was later used, for a great
variety of subjects, by Milton,
Wordsworth, Christina Rossetti, D. G. Rossetti, and other sonneteers, who
sometimes made it technically easier in English (which does not have as many
rhyming possibilities as Italian) by introducing a new pair of rhymes in the
second four lines of the octave.
2. The Earl of Surrey and other English experimenters in
the sixteenth century also developed a stanza form called the English sonnet, or else the Shakespearean
sonnet, after its greatest practitioner. This sonnet falls into three quatrains and a concluding couplet: abab cdcd efef gg. There was a notable variant, the Spenserian sonnet, in which Spenser linked each
quatrain to the next by a continuing rhyme: abab bcbc
cdcd ee.
John Donne shifted from the hitherto primary
subject, sexual love, to a variety of
religious themes in his Holy Sonnets, written early in the seventeenth
century; and Milton, in the latter
part of that century, expanded the range of the sonnet to other matters of
serious concern. Except for a lapse in the English Neoclassic Period, the
sonnet has remained a popular form to the present day and includes among its
distinguished practitioners, in the nineteenth
century, Wordsworth,
Keats, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Christina Rossetti, and Dante Gabriel
Rossetti, and in the twentieth
century, Edwin
Arlington Robinson, Edna St. Vincent Millay, W. B. Yeats, Robert Frost, W. H.
Auden, and Dylan Thomas.
The stanza
is just long enough to permit a fairly complex lyric development, yet so short,
and so crucial in its rhymes, as to pose a standing challenge to the creativity
and ability of the poet.
The rhyme pattern of the Petrarchan
sonnet has on the whole favoured a statement of a problem, situation, or
incident in the octave, with a resolution in the sestet. The English form sometimes uses a
similar division of material, but often presents instead a
repetition-with-variation of a statement in each of the three quatrains; in
either case, the final couplet in the English sonnet usually imposes an
epigrammatic turn at the end. In Drayton’s fine
Elizabethan sonnet in the English form “Since
there’s no help, come let us kiss and part,” the lover brusquely declares
in the first quatrain, then reiterates in the second, that he is glad that the
affair is cleanly ended, then hesitates at the finality of the parting in the
third quatrain, and in the concluding couplet suddenly drops his swagger to
make one last plea. Here are the third quatrain and couplet:
Now at the last gasp of love’s latest breath,
When, his pulse failing, passion speechless lies,
When faith is kneeling by his bed of death,
And innocence is closing up his eyes;
Now if thou wouldst, when all have given him over,
From death to life thou mightst him yet recover.
Following
Petrarch’s early example, a number of Elizabethan authors arranged their poems
into sonnet sequences, or sonnet cycles, in which a series of sonnets are
linked together by exploring the varied aspects of a relationship between
lovers, or else by indicating a development in the relationship that
constitutes a kind of implicit plot.
Shakespeare ordered his sonnets in a sequence, as did Sidney in Astrophel and Stella (1580) and Spenser in Amoretti (1595).
Later examples
of the sonnet sequence on various subjects are Wordsworth’s The River Duddon, D. G. Rossetti’s House of Life, Elizabeth
Barrett Browning’s Sonnets from the Portuguese, and the American poet
William Ellery Leonard’s Two Lives.
Dylan Thomas’ Altar wise by Owl-light (1936) is a
sequence of ten sonnets which are abstruse meditations on the poet’s own life. George Meredith’s Modern Love (1862), which concerns a bitterly unhappy marriage, is
sometimes called a sonnet sequence,
even though its component poems consist not of fourteen but of sixteen lines.
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