FORMAL
POETRY AND THE SONNET
by David B. Axelrod
Many poets write using rhyme. Many more are masters of set forms. At
a time when the majority of America's recognized poets are writing in a
plain style--blank verse and free verse--going back to learn the "forms" might seem unfashionable. However, there are some good
arguments to encourage a diligent student of poetry to the study of
formal poetry.
There are those who say "if you don't count the beats, it isn't
poetry." After nearly a century of free verse, such a pronouncement
seems a bit extreme! What can be said, however, is that the predominant
history of poetry is one of regular meter and rhyme. A poet should spend
some time with forms if for no other reason than to honor the past, to
pay a little back to tradition!
Then, if you think about it, writing poems with "no rules, " can breed a certain laxity. If there is no rhyme, no regular
meter, no rule for length of the line or the poem itself, what measure
does a poet apply to judge a poem a success? One thing following a form
can do is send a poet back to work and rework the lines until they are
the best example of the form. Thinking, working that hard could produce
a better poem than the amorphous notion that anything goes in poem!
Perhaps one of the best explanations for what a poet can learn from a
turn with forms, came from one of America's foremost sonneteers, Aaron
Kramer. Asked by students why anyone would want to write a sonnet, he
pulled a chair into the center of the room.
"First, " he said, pressing his wrists together, "you
are handcuffed by having to write fourteen lines.
"Then, " he said, sitting down to press his ankles
together, "you are shackled by having to write with a set
meter."
Leaning forward to crouch into a ball, he declared, "They put
you into a sack called rhyme."
Rising suddenly from the chair to spread his arms, he declared, "But think what a magic act it is if you can set you meaning
free!"
Writing a form, mastering a form, truly saying what you want
while doing what they say, is a bit of a Houdini act! Why not try
a sonnet and see if you can rise to the challenge. Perform the necessary
word magic and you will have bragging rights for life!
Some reference material:
www.sonnets.org
links you to a group devoted to sonnets and provides items like a
rhyming dictionary.
http://www.sonnets.org/basicforms.htmaddress
the structure or logic of the sonnet, also sometimes referred to as the "Volta."
Here's a definition of a sonnet by Michael Jarrett, Associate
Professor of English at Pennsylvania
State University, which provides the basics:
Regarding the meter: English, it is said, is spoken very
comfortably in iambic pentameter. That said, most people need to relax
into writing with a regular meter. Start by writing out your full name,
presumably all three parts (or more): first name, middle name, last name
and even Junior if that applies. You certainly know where to put the
accents, the stresses when pronouncing your own name. Mark over the
accented syllables with a /. Mark over the unaccented syllables
with a simple --. Guess what! You just "scanned" your
name. Scansion is the notation of the meter in poetry.
Set beats, or patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables are given
names. Sonnets are written in measured units, "feet, " which
are called "iambs." Sonnets are "iambic." Each line
of a sonnet contains five regular iambic units or feet. (Quick math
therefore, tells you that a line has ten regularly patterned syllables,
five iambic feet, and the entire sonnet, therefore, will have 140 such
iambically arranged syllables or seventy iambic feet before it's done.)
Try marking the correct stressed and unstressed syllables:
"Destroy, create, deceive, " are all iambic
words, as is "believable"--four syllables, _ / _ / .
In fact, the whole preceding sentence scans iambically as does this
one!
Mark the stressed and unstressed syllables when you read the
following line:
"Perhaps it's time to scan a line of verse." It's five
regular feet, iambic pentameter! _ / _ / _ / _ / _ /
Ah, but how could that be when the only two syllable word is "perhaps?" Well, it takes a little practice but if you just
listen to the way words are spoken, and occasionally check the
dictionary, you will grow accustomed to finding the beat. The trick is
to not force the words into unnatural places. Don't go putting the
ACcent on the wrong SYLlable! Multi-syllabic words are pronounced in an
agreed upon manner. You aren't allowed to fracture the language and call
it "sonnet."
Another pitfall in writing the sonnet is "padding" the
lines to make the meter come out correctly iambic. You may catch
yourself adding unneeded words--syllables introduced into a line not
because you need them but because you want to keep the beat. Oops!
Padding your lines, like padding your expense account, isn't an honest
path. A good poet holds him or herself to account. Every word, every
syllable should be there to further your meaning, not just to fill out
the form.
There is room in any poem for some poetic license, but as a student
mastering the form, try to be as correct, as formal as you can this
first time through. Similarly, you should try not to fracture normal
sentence structure, syntax, to make the beats come out regular. Try to
write "naturally, " smoothly, so that the lines scan regularly
but you are still writing modern English and more so, saying what you
mean.
Regarding rhyme
: As noted above in the definition, sonnets
commit themselves to one or another regular rhyme scheme. "Scheme" refers to the pattern of rhymed line endings. While
there are a substantial variety of schemes, it's suggested you pick one
or another of the regular patterns:
A B B A C D D C E F F E GG or A B A B C D C D E F E F GG
Having established the rhyme scheme you will follow, read "How
to tell a good rhyme from a bad" so that you don't wind up writing
a nursery rhyme. Rather, the challenge, the Houdini trick which Aaron
Kramer so cleverly enacted, is to say what you mean, not succumb to
making rhymes.
The logic of sonnets: From the rhyme scheme above, you may
have noticed that your sonnet will be divided into three quatrains
(three stanzas of four lines each) and a couplet (your last two rhymed
lines). For some, that suggests that sonnet, like an Aristotelian plot,
has a beginning, middle and end. Indeed, if sonnets don't proceed as
stories, they may act like a syllogism in logic with a major premise,
minor premise and conclusion.
There is, in a sonnet, as often what is called "the volta, " or "turn:"
"
(see source http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/s/so/sonnet.html
)
Whether you wish to organize your sonnet as a story or follow a
certain logic, you will be writing a substantial poem. By that it's
meant that you have lots of room to let your subject matter grow. The
lines are long enough and fourteen of them are ample length to do a good
job.
Most of all, have a good time. Folks do crossword puzzle, play word
games. They rise to the challenge with cleverness and a love of
language. So, the sonnet should make a worthy pastime, a good game. With
luck you'll trigger something wonderful. Poets who avoid form, sometimes
drift into a habit of thinking "anything goes." If the sonnet
requires more thought, more effort, that extra work could bring out the
best in you. Enjoy!
YOU SAY YOU'RE NOT SATISFIED. YOU WANT MORE FOR YOU R MONEY?