The Blank Verse Sonnet is simply a sonnet written in Blank Verse. It has all of the features of
the sonnet without rhyme. Although Blank Verse is often used in narratives, it
can also adapt to the lyrical sonnet. Blank verse is a strophic sonnet in iambic pentameter.
Sonnets without rhyme can be traced back to Edmund Spenser.
The defining
features of the Blank Verse Sonnet are:
- metric, written iambic pentameter. In English most sonnets are written in iambic pentameter but there are some that occasionally stray from the norm. To metrically stray is not an option with the Blank Verse Sonnet.
- unrhymed.
- a quatorzain with no stanza breaks.
- composed with a pivot or turn which logically arrives in the 2nd half of the sonnet.
Example:
Tell Me of Your Anger in Whispers ( Blank Verse Sonnet )
Should you be moved to speak in anger, love,
I ask that first you test your words alone.
You'll want to be assured your meaning's clear.
If meaning's very clear, then is it fair?
Is it essential now that blame be found?
Perhaps, the words should simply disappear
for now, until your anger can abate.
If blunders I have made have caused upset
I'll be contrite and wanting to amend.
Let's lie together in our bed tonight
and you in dulcet tones will make me know
whatever actions I should contemplate.
I'll listen, think, and I will understand.
Speak whispers to me love, I'll make it right.
You will be pleased to know that your blog comes up first when 'sonnet blank verse' is typed into google. That's a pretty good poem, too.
ReplyDelete