The Sonnet form was introduced to England by Sir Thomas Wyatt and Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey in the 16th century. They adapted the Petrarchan form of the sonnet popularized by Italian poet Petrarch, creating the English or Shakespearean sonnet structure with 14 lines and a specific rhyme scheme. William Shakespeare later popularized the sonnet form in England through his famous sonnet sequences.
England... ... i think...
Sonnets were well-established in England before Shakespeare had a go at them.
we dont know
The sonnet was introduced to England by Sir Thomas Wyatt in the early 16th century. He translated and adapted the Petrarchan sonnet form, which originated in Italy, making it accessible to English poets. Wyatt's innovations paved the way for later poets, including Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, and eventually William Shakespeare, who further developed the sonnet form in English literature.
Sir Thomas Wyatt and Henry Howard Kidd
She asks herself in what ways she loves her husband and is able to come up with seven answers.
The sonnet was popularised in England by Thomas Wyatt and Henry Howard Earl of Surrey, who were some two generations before Shakespeare. (Shakespeare was born in 1564, Henry Howard in 1517). The sonnet was already well established in Italy by the time of Howard and Wyatt; it had been made the natural form for Renaissance lyric by Petrarch during the 1350's. The English sonnetteers were imitating an established Continental model. By Shakespeare's time the sonnet was still new, but no longer cutting-edge.
An Elizabethan sonnet is a 14-line poem with a specific rhyme scheme and meter that was popularized during the Elizabethan era in England. It follows the rhyme scheme ABAB CDCD EFEF GG, and is typically written in iambic pentameter. Some of the most famous Elizabethan sonnet writers include William Shakespeare and Edmund Spenser.
sonnet
The sonnet "Work without Hope" was written to express the feeling of despair and futility that can come from working towards a goal that seems unattainable or hopeless.
Sonnet 18 and sonnet 116
Come on england