Commentary and Philosophy Poetry posted August 2, 2015 | Chapters: | ...289 290 -291- 292... |
A Fusion Sonnet
A chapter in the book Little Poems
Humanity
by Treischel
|
At least one can hope.
This is a Fusion Sonnet.
It was invented by the Greek poet, Yannis Livadas (born in 1969), and popularized by Sonnet Modal. I was drawn to this one by the tripple rhymes imbedded in it.
This falls under the auspicies of the Modern Sonnet genre. As such, it breaks several Sonnet rules. Most notibly, it has 21 lines rather than the the typical 14. The fusion comes from blending in 4 lines of free verse at lines 11 through 14. It has a strict structure and rhyme scheme, but is more flexible in the area of meter. Here are the complex rules:
14 line Poem followed by a half sonnet of 7 lines acting as a coda or tail to add additional stability to the poem. No particular meter is followed fusing it with the modern free verse style.
First Fourteen Lines:
Same Rhyme in 1st,5th,9th & 10th Lines.
Same Rhyme in 2nd,3rd & 4th Lines.
Same Rhyme in 6th,7th & 8th lines.
Rhetorical questions in 9th & 10th lines.
Negative and pessimistic note in the first 10 lines.
Free verse carrying Optimistic Tone in 11th, 12th,13 & 14th Lines.
Volta gradually through 9th, 10th and 11th lines.
Next Seven Lines:-The Half Sonnet acting as a coda.
Same Rhyme in 16th and 17th lines.
Same Rhyme in 18th and 19th lines.
Volta in the 20th line.
For this poem the rhymes scheme, as laid out above is:
A1, b,b,b, A2, c,c,c, (4 lines free verse)----A1, d,d,e,e,A2, where the capital letters indicate repeated lines.
The picture was taken by the author himself at the Minnesota State Fair in August, 2014.
Pays
one point
and 2 member cents. This is a Fusion Sonnet.
It was invented by the Greek poet, Yannis Livadas (born in 1969), and popularized by Sonnet Modal. I was drawn to this one by the tripple rhymes imbedded in it.
This falls under the auspicies of the Modern Sonnet genre. As such, it breaks several Sonnet rules. Most notibly, it has 21 lines rather than the the typical 14. The fusion comes from blending in 4 lines of free verse at lines 11 through 14. It has a strict structure and rhyme scheme, but is more flexible in the area of meter. Here are the complex rules:
14 line Poem followed by a half sonnet of 7 lines acting as a coda or tail to add additional stability to the poem. No particular meter is followed fusing it with the modern free verse style.
First Fourteen Lines:
Same Rhyme in 1st,5th,9th & 10th Lines.
Same Rhyme in 2nd,3rd & 4th Lines.
Same Rhyme in 6th,7th & 8th lines.
Rhetorical questions in 9th & 10th lines.
Negative and pessimistic note in the first 10 lines.
Free verse carrying Optimistic Tone in 11th, 12th,13 & 14th Lines.
Volta gradually through 9th, 10th and 11th lines.
Next Seven Lines:-The Half Sonnet acting as a coda.
Same Rhyme in 16th and 17th lines.
Same Rhyme in 18th and 19th lines.
Volta in the 20th line.
For this poem the rhymes scheme, as laid out above is:
A1, b,b,b, A2, c,c,c, (4 lines free verse)----A1, d,d,e,e,A2, where the capital letters indicate repeated lines.
The picture was taken by the author himself at the Minnesota State Fair in August, 2014.
You need to login or register to write reviews. It's quick! We only ask four questions to new members.
© Copyright 2025. Treischel All rights reserved.
Treischel has granted FanStory.com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.