The sonnet, a 14-line poetic form, originated in Italy and was later adapted by English poets. Its structure evolved from the Italian octave-sestet to the English three quatrains and a couplet, allowing for more flexible progression of ideas.
English sonnets explored themes of love, beauty, and mortality, often using nature imagery. They maintained the Italian focus on a single theme or argument, condensed into 14 lines of iambic pentameter with varying rhyme schemes.
Origins and Development of the Sonnet
- Italian roots trace back to Giacomo da Lentini in 13th century Sicily innovated 14-line structure
- Petrarch refined form in 14th century Italy established themes of courtly love
- Sir Thomas Wyatt and Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey introduced sonnets to England in 16th century
- English poets translated and adapted Petrarchan sonnets incorporated native poetic traditions
- Shakespearean sonnet structure evolved three quatrains and a couplet (ABAB CDCD EFEF GG)
- Spenserian sonnet variation interlocked rhyme scheme (ABAB BCBC CDCD EE) added complexity
Italian influence on Renaissance poetry
- English poets adopted Petrarchan conventions idealized beloved and explored unrequited love
- Courtly love themes permeated English sonnets chivalric devotion and spiritual admiration
- Structural shift from octave-sestet to three quatrains and a couplet allowed more flexible progression
- Nature imagery borrowed from Italian tradition metaphors of seasons and landscapes
- English sonnets retained focus on single theme or argument condensed into 14 lines
Themes and Characteristics
Themes in sonnet expression
- Love explored multifaceted aspects romantic passion, spiritual devotion, unrequited affection
- Beauty celebrated physical attributes of beloved (eyes, lips) and transcendent qualities
- Ephemeral nature of beauty contrasted with enduring power of poetry (Shakespeare's Sonnet 18)
- Mortality contemplated impermanence of life and legacy through art
- Time's passage central theme aging, seasons, fleeting moments (Shakespeare's Sonnet 73)
Characteristics of English sonnets
- 14 lines in iambic pentameter create rhythmic structure and musical quality
- Rhyme schemes vary Shakespearean (ABAB CDCD EFEF GG), Spenserian (ABAB BCBC CDCD EE)
- Volta (turn) signals shift in tone or argument usually occurs in line 9 of Shakespearean sonnets
- Conceit extended metaphor throughout poem (Sidney's Sonnet 71, "Who will in fairest book of Nature know")
- Compressed language employs dense imagery and wordplay maximize impact in limited space
- Addressed to specific subject often lover (Shakespeare's "Fair Youth") or patron (Spenser's "Amoretti")
- Sonnet sequences developed interconnected poems exploring relationship over time (Sidney's "Astrophil and Stella")