Well, I've created a form of poem I call the Brazilian Sonnet some 2 years ago. It consists in making a poem with 1 stanza of 5 verses, 1 of 4, 1 of 3, and 1 of 2 verses. These don't have a specific order, so you can use that to give different rythms to the poem, as well as not so direct meaning through the choices in numbers and or grouping the stanzas. The author can also choose to add a 1-verse stanza to complete the sequence.
This form allows for any number of choices by the author, but gives it a minimal limitation to help the author in the creative process. Here's the link for the website where I first placed my ideas in English: http://allpoetry.com/column/7557109-On-the-Brazilian-Sonnet--by-bunytou
sonnet
Sonnet 18 and sonnet 116
It is also called the English sonnet. The other form is the Italian sonnet, or petrarchan sonnet.
Sonnet 130
The Sonnet Series - 2013 Sonnet 31 The Old Man and the Sonnet 1-8 was released on: USA: 1 May 2013
The Italian Sonnet
It is a petrarchan sonnet, made out of an octave and a sestet.
If you mean William Shakespeare's sonnet 73, it is not surprisingly a Shakespearean sonnet.
sonnet is consisted of fourteen lines,there are two kinds of sonnet-octave and sestet
Shakespeare's sonnet 130 is a Shakespearean sonnet in terms of rhyme scheme. Its meter is iambic pentameter, and its tone is satirical.
A sonnet with 10 syllables in each line is typically referred to as a decasyllabic sonnet. It is a specific form of the sonnet that follows a strict meter and rhyme scheme.
the English sonnet