Sonnet - Definition and Types
What is a sonnet? The word sonnet has been derived from the Italian word sonetto which means a short song or lyric. It is a short poem having 14 lines. The credit for creating this poetic form goes to the Italian poet Petrarch who wrote a large number of love sonnets. Types of Sonnets Broadly speaking, there are two types of sonnets – the Petrarchan sonnet also known as the classical sonnet and the Shakespearean sonnet. The Petrarchan or classical sonnet is named after the Italian poet Petrarch who wrote a large number of sonnets addressed to the already married lady, Laura, with whom he had fallen in love. It is divided into two stanzas. The first stanza consists of eight lines and is known as the octave and the second stanza consists of six lines and is known as the sestet. The rhyme scheme of the octave is abbaabba and that of the sestet is cdecde or sometimes cdccdc. The octave offers the reader the subject of the sonnet which is generally an argument, observ...