The Emperor's New Sonnet is a Poem by Jose Villa Garcia and the Poem includes nothing but its title. It may sound crazy or weird, but that's how the Poem really is. Here's what the poem looks like:
The Emperor's New Sonnet
There are no words, right? Well, that's the mystery of this poem. For more information, you can read the explanation about the "Empty Poem" here: http://www.shvoong.com/humanities/theory-criticism/2350290-emperor-new-sonnet-closer-look/
bucause ho dont want any words
Sonnet
A sonnet is a poem of 14 lines with very specific rhyme patterns.
It is neither. It is a speech, extracted from the play As You Like It by William Shakespeare. It is poetic, but it is not a poem since it is not intended to stand alone as a poem. It is not a sonnet--it does not rhyme as all sonnets do.Just for your info: If something is a sonnet then, believe me, it has to be a poem as well. Guaranteed.
A 14-line poem with certain structure is called a Sonnet. Shakespear was a master of the Sonnet.
"The Emperor's New Sonnet" by Jose Garcia Villa is a poem that satirizes the world of poetry and literary criticism. The poem pokes fun at the idea of creating new forms of poetry just for the sake of being different. It highlights the absurdity of some poets and critics who value innovation over substance.
It's a poem by Jose Garcia Villa. Alluding to the story, "The Emperor's New Clothes," the poem consists of only the title and nothing more.
bucause ho dont want any words
A sonnet is an example of a poem.
14 lines in a sonnet
Sonnet
A sonnet IS a poem. Not a part in one. If you had just used google you'd of known that immediately.
It's a sonnet of course.
A sonnet is a quatorzain, or a 14-line poem.
A fourteen line poem in iambic pentameter (in English) is very likely to be a sonnet. It isn't guaranteed to be a sonnet - but the first thing you check is whether it is a sonnet or not.
poem, pome
No