Shakespeare Sonnets Intro - PPT
Shakespeare Sonnets Intro - PPT
Shakespeare Sonnets Intro - PPT
Sonnets
English 10
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What is a sonnet?
A sonnet is a fourteen-
line poem in iambic
pentameter.
Iambic what?
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Iambic Pentameter
Iambic Pentameter is a poetic form which poets and
playwrights typically used to write poems in Elizabethan
England. It is the meter that Shakespeare mostly uses.
Iamb: has the first syllable unaccented and the second accented.
What is a syllable?
A syllable is the unit of sound
It is either stressed or unstressed
4
Meter: Meter in poetry is a rhythm of accented
and unaccented syllables arranged into feet.
- Meter in poetry is what brings the poem to life and is the internal
beat or rhythm with which it is read.
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Pentameter
Pentameter:
Penta is from the Greek for five.
Meter is really the pattern
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For the sound of Iambic Pentameter,
think of a heartbeat
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Anexample of Iambic
pentameter from
Shakespeare’s Romeo &
Juliet:
b i c
Iam
Iamb
Pentameter
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Rhyming patterns
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Sonnet 116
Let me not to the marriage of true minds (a)
3 Quatrains
Admit impediments. Love is not love (b)
Which alters when it alteration finds,(a)
Or bends with the remover to remove:(b)
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Sonnet 18 – Second Quatrain
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
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Sonnet 18 – Third Quatrain
But thy eternal summer shall not fade,
Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest,
Nor shall death brag thou wanderest in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou growest.
Third quatrain: Here the argument takes a big left turn with the familiar
"But." Shakespeare says that the main reason he won't compare his
beloved to summer is that summer dies — but she won't. He refers to the
first two quatrains — her "eternal summer" won't fade, and she won't "lose
possession" of the "fair" (the beauty) she possesses. So he keeps the
metaphors going, but in a different direction. And for good measure, he
throws in a negative version of all the sunshine in this poem — the "shade"
of death, which, evidently, his beloved won't have to worry about.
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Sonnet 18 – final couplet
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