General Poetry posted August 25, 2015 | Chapters: | ...304 305 -306- 307... |
Rondel Prime Sonnet
A chapter in the book Little Poems
Sidewalk Adorned
by Treischel
|
A concrete sidewalk can be pretty plain, but a pot of flowers can really dress it up. This sidewalk had several of them with different plants and flowers. I tried to find out what these are. To the best that I could determine, they are geraniums.
This poem is a Rondel Prime Sonnet
A Rondel is a poem with two Quatrains followed by a Sestet where the first two lines of the poem become repeated as the last two lines of the next two stanzas (the second Quatrain and the Sestet). Sometimes the second line is dropped in the last stanza. It is usually in tetrameter, but is always iambic.
So, the rhyme scheme would be:
ABba abAB abbaAB (Prime),
or
ABba abAB abbaA (Classic).
The conversion to a Sonnet is quite simple. Change the meter to pentameter and separate the last two lines of the Sestet to make it a Couplet. In actuality the Rondel Prime, as introduced in France about 1544 by Clermont Marot, was a Sonnet. But the classic form became more popular. The rhyme scheme then for the Sonnet becomes:
ABba abAB abba AB.
This photograph was taken by the author himself on July 11, 2015.
Pays
one point
and 2 member cents. This poem is a Rondel Prime Sonnet
A Rondel is a poem with two Quatrains followed by a Sestet where the first two lines of the poem become repeated as the last two lines of the next two stanzas (the second Quatrain and the Sestet). Sometimes the second line is dropped in the last stanza. It is usually in tetrameter, but is always iambic.
So, the rhyme scheme would be:
ABba abAB abbaAB (Prime),
or
ABba abAB abbaA (Classic).
The conversion to a Sonnet is quite simple. Change the meter to pentameter and separate the last two lines of the Sestet to make it a Couplet. In actuality the Rondel Prime, as introduced in France about 1544 by Clermont Marot, was a Sonnet. But the classic form became more popular. The rhyme scheme then for the Sonnet becomes:
ABba abAB abba AB.
This photograph was taken by the author himself on July 11, 2015.
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