General Poetry posted May 7, 2016 | Chapters: | ...402 403 -404- 405... |
A Tiara of Sonnets (Read notes first)
A chapter in the book Little Poems
Crabapple Bloom
by Treischel
|
Recognized |
Anemoi - Greek gods of the winds
Boreas - Greek god of the north winds, bringer of winter.
Gaia - Greek goddess of the earth, Mother Earth
Zephyr -Greek god of the west wind, bringer of spring.
Azure - a shade of blue
Claret - a shade of red
Carnelian - a shade of red
Crimson - a shade of red
Ruby - a shade of red
Whorls - circular ridges
When the fruit trees bloom with flowers in the spring, delightful color returns to the world. After a drab winter, it is a pure delight to behold. I tried in the first Sonnet to convey a battle of the winds to gain the charm over Mother Earth as the Greeks describe it in their mythology.
This poem is a Tiara of Sonnets.
Fellow Fanstorian, I Am Cat came up with this brilliant concept and should be commended for it.
It is based on the concept of the Crown of Sonnets, which has a sequence of seven Sonnets, interlinked by last-to-first lines, and concluding with the final line being the same as the first line of the first Sonnet. Thus creating a circle that is the Crown. The Tiara of Sonnets, then, has the same concept, but with only three Sonnets. Thus a much smaller Tiara, rather than a Crown.
For this Tiara, since there are three primary Sonnet formats (the Petrarchan, the English, and the Spensarian), I thought I'd write one segment in each format here, but that is not a requirement.
Hope you enjoy it.
This photograph was taken by the author himself on April 29, 2016.
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and 2 member cents. Boreas - Greek god of the north winds, bringer of winter.
Gaia - Greek goddess of the earth, Mother Earth
Zephyr -Greek god of the west wind, bringer of spring.
Azure - a shade of blue
Claret - a shade of red
Carnelian - a shade of red
Crimson - a shade of red
Ruby - a shade of red
Whorls - circular ridges
When the fruit trees bloom with flowers in the spring, delightful color returns to the world. After a drab winter, it is a pure delight to behold. I tried in the first Sonnet to convey a battle of the winds to gain the charm over Mother Earth as the Greeks describe it in their mythology.
This poem is a Tiara of Sonnets.
Fellow Fanstorian, I Am Cat came up with this brilliant concept and should be commended for it.
It is based on the concept of the Crown of Sonnets, which has a sequence of seven Sonnets, interlinked by last-to-first lines, and concluding with the final line being the same as the first line of the first Sonnet. Thus creating a circle that is the Crown. The Tiara of Sonnets, then, has the same concept, but with only three Sonnets. Thus a much smaller Tiara, rather than a Crown.
For this Tiara, since there are three primary Sonnet formats (the Petrarchan, the English, and the Spensarian), I thought I'd write one segment in each format here, but that is not a requirement.
Hope you enjoy it.
This photograph was taken by the author himself on April 29, 2016.
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