just believe in ur self
I really don't know because i am looking for the format of a sonnet and I can't happen to find it because the internet sucks and google.com and bing.com don't happen to work at all right now. So i really don't know and i can't find my notes. And my poem project is due tomorrow. So, good luck! And wish me good luck
Petrarch wrote sonnets that consider love in a early renaissance sense; that is, they idealise the beloved lady, and they focus on the divine qualities she possesses, while lamenting the pain the speaker feels in not being with her. Each sonnet of fourteen lines considers one proposition in the opening octave of eight lines, and then considers the reverse or opposing view in the final sestet, or six lines. The switch from one view to its opposite is called the volta. Shakespeare wrote sonnets in a much later period, and pokes fun at the idea that his beloved lady could possibly represent divine beauty. In addition, he took the English form of the sonnet, developed by the Earl of Surrey and Thomas Wyatt, which included a final rhyming pair of lines, called a rhyming couplet. Shakespeare then pursued the same proposition throughout the entire sonnet until the very end, often pushing the volta to the final couplet.
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Positive friendship is when you are really good friends with someone. A good friendship is when you have: Trust, understanding of one another, facts about them, having fun all the time together. Just doing things friends do and you both enjoy.
Friends -Hedely makes me smile everytime :)
I will observe what she thinks about boys and if she will make friendship with me
The Art of the Shakespearean SonnetThe sonnet is a traditionally rigid poetic form featuring fourteen lines with rhyme, meter, and logical structure. The form was first developed in Italy during the High Middle Ages, with such well-known figures as Dante Alighieri putting it to use. But the most famous sonneteer of that time was Francesco Petrarca, and it is after him that the Italian sonnet got its name. The Petrarchan sonnet's fourteen lines are divided into an octave (eight lines) and a sestet (six lines), with the sestet responding to some proposition introduced in the octave. The rhyme scheme varied somewhat, but typically featured no more than four or five rhymes, for example abbaabba cdecde.Thomas Wyatt introduced the sonnet form into the English language in the early 16th century. Although Wyatt stuck to Petrarchan conventions, the form soon evolved into a specifically English one, and it was used by a good number of Renaissance poets - including Shakespeare. In fact, the English sonnet is often referred to as the Shakespearean sonnet for the same reason the Italian sonnet is often named after Petrarch. It is also sometimes referred to as the Elizabethan sonnet, after the era during which it took shape.The Shakespearean sonnet is distinct from the Petrarchan sonnet in a number of ways. First, the octave-sestet division is replaced by a quatrain-couplet division, with three quatrains of four lines each followed by a closing two-line couplet. The rhyme scheme of a traditional Shakespearean sonnet is abab cdcd efef gg, increasing the total number of rhymes to seven. The meter is iambic pentameter, five feet of two syllables each (ten syllables total per line), where each foot is normally an iamb consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one. Finally, the logical structure of a Shakespearean sonnet parallels that of the Petrarchan to a certain extent, in that the third quatrain sometimes introduces a twist on the theme of the preceding two; but it is the distinctive couplet that carries the pop, normally delivering a great overarching message or a deeply insightful thought.
You are describing the rimescheme of quatrains with alternate riming: abab cdcd efef ghgh ijij ..... An example of a poem which uses this rhyme scheme is 'How to Die' by Siegfried Sassoon.
Quatrain 1: When you're forty, you're going to look awful Quatrain 2: And you won't be able to say where your beauty went Quatrain 3: Wouldn't it be better to have a good-looking kid. The three quatrains sum up the idea of the poem. The couplet at the end summarizes what has been said by presenting contrasts between old and new and warm and cold. It doesn't add much to what has been said before. In some ways this sonnet shows octet/sestet structure: the first two quatrains give the setup and the third gives the payoff.
I believe that argument is good for a good friendship as you can freely say what you feel and there is no restrictions..