Sonnets Step-by-Step
Sonnets Step-by-Step
Sonnets Step-by-Step
Sonnets
William Shakespeare, The Bard, wrote 154 sonnets. The majority of the sonnets (sonnets 1-126)
are addressed to a young man, a Mr. W. H. (believed to be Henry Wriothesley, The earl of
Southampton). In the first of these sonnets, Shakespeare encourages the man to marry. His
persuasion follows a pattern. First, Shakespeare flatters the young man and proclaims his love
and admiration for him. Then he insists that he should marry and have children so that his
beauty and legacy will continue.
Sonnet: A 14-line poem usually written in iambic pentameter and with any several traditional
rhyme schemes. A sonnet usually consists of two parts: and eight-line section (the octet)
followed by a six-line section (a sestet). The Shakespearean sonnet rhyme scheme is ABAB
CDCD EFEF GG. Sonnets use figurative language, metaphors, similes, and imagery to
convey a message, which is usually more directly said in the last two lines of a sonnet.
Sonnets Step-by-Step
1. Und erstand mete r. Each syllable in a word is either stressed (hard) or unstressed
(soft) based on the pronunciation of the letters. Stressed syllables are marked with a / over
the letters; unstressed are marked with a u. Mark the following syllables as stressed or
unstressed after pronouncing them aloud.
2. Unde rstand ia mbic mea su re. An iambic foot contains two syllables, the first
unstressed and the second stressed. Iambic measure is often called the heartbeat meter
because of its similarity of the rhythm of the human heart. Note the following terms with an
iambic rhythm:
c. ______________________________________________________________________
d. _____________________________________________________________________
4. Understand rhyme sche mes and stru ctu re . A sonnet has 14 lines.
The last six are the sestet. The sestet holds the last two lines, which are a couplet; the last
word in each of the couplet’s lines rhyme with each other. There is a rhyme scheme through
the entire poem. See Shakespeare’s Sonnet #18 for example:
In the octet of the sonnet above, Shakespeare begins comparing his subject to a summer day,
an event associated with positive connotations. However, the remaining images in the sestet
reveal how a summer’s day is not always beautiful; it may be windy, it’s dated and will end
eventually, it may be too hot, and it's not stable because nature may take away fair skies.
In the sestet, lines 9 through 14, returns the focus of the poem’s subject: their loveliness will
always be ready, not even diminished as they grow old. The couplet bluntly states that the
speaker gets life, enjoyment, from the subject’s loveliness.
Now mark the rhyme scheme in the following Shakespearean sonnet and identify the octet,
sestet, and couplet. What is being said in each?
Sonnet 23
5. You r turn. Write a rough draft. Choose a message you’d like to deliver to someone
through a sonnet. Using iambic pentameter and the Shakespearean rhyme scheme, write a
14-line poem. Make sure to end the octet with the end of a sentence and contain the couplet
to a sentence. In addition to following the correct form, you must also include a
minimum of one simile, one metaphor, and alliteration.
1. __________________________________________________________________ A.
2. __________________________________________________________________ B.
3. __________________________________________________________________ A.
4. __________________________________________________________________ B
5. __________________________________________________________________ C.
6. __________________________________________________________________ D.
7. __________________________________________________________________ C.
8. __________________________________________________________________ D.
9. __________________________________________________________________ E.
10. __________________________________________________________________ F.
11. __________________________________________________________________ E.
12. __________________________________________________________________ F.
13. __________________________________________________________________ G.
14. __________________________________________________________________ G.
6. Revi se and che ck for syllable count, rhyme scheme, simile, metaphor, alliteration,
spelling and mechanics. Type your sonnet in MLA format.