Commentary and Philosophy Poetry posted May 18, 2018 | Chapters: | -1- |
A Wreath of Sicilian Sonnets - see note
A chapter in the book Midnight Echoes
Midnight Echoes
by tfawcus
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A Wreath of Sonnets is a connected sequence of fifteen poems. The form was invented by the Slovene Romantic poet France Preseren in 1833. It varies the traditional Heroic Crown of Sonnets by making the final sonnet acrostic. In this case, I have chosen to form the acrostic from the title, Moonlight Echoes.
The first 13 sonnets are linked by repeating the last line of each as the first line of the next. The 14th one closes with the first line of the first sonnet and the 15th sonnet is made up of the first lines of the preceding 14 sonnets.
The Sicilian Sonnet is the earliest known sonnet form, forerunner to the Petrarchan or Italian sonnet. It first appeared in the early 13th century at the Sicilian court of Frederick II, the King of Sicily. The Petrarchan sonnet came about a hundred years later, in the early 14th century and altered the rhyme scheme of the octet from abababab to abbaabba. Both have some freedom of choice in the rhyme scheme of the sestet. I have chosen cdecde for this sequence.
Glossary:
Dun: a dull brown colour
Dreamfault: an invented portmanteau word, aiming to capture the idea of dreams being difficult to recapture in their entirety
Ruth: regret
Stricture: restriction
Hoar: whitish grey, as in hoar frost
Selkie: a mythical creature that resembles a seal in the water but assumes human form on land. Stories frequently revolve around female selkies being coerced into relationships with humans by someone stealing and hiding their sealskin, often not regaining the skin until years later upon which they commonly return to the sea, forsaking their human family.
Gestalt: an organized whole that is seen as more than the sum of its parts.
Polydorus: King Priam sent his youngest son, Polydorus, to Thrace, under the protection of King Polymester, in case Troy fell. When it did, Polymester threw him into the sea instead and stole all the gold that Priam had endowed him with.
The Anemone or windflower was said to have arisen from Aphrodite's tears as she mourned the death of Adonis.
Sith: an archaic variation of 'since', derived from the Old English 'siththa'.
The image, Midnight Echo, is reproduced under copyright by permission of the talented artist and poet, Sue Vincent.
See https://scvincent.com/painting/ for further examples of her work.
Pays
one point
and 2 member cents. The first 13 sonnets are linked by repeating the last line of each as the first line of the next. The 14th one closes with the first line of the first sonnet and the 15th sonnet is made up of the first lines of the preceding 14 sonnets.
The Sicilian Sonnet is the earliest known sonnet form, forerunner to the Petrarchan or Italian sonnet. It first appeared in the early 13th century at the Sicilian court of Frederick II, the King of Sicily. The Petrarchan sonnet came about a hundred years later, in the early 14th century and altered the rhyme scheme of the octet from abababab to abbaabba. Both have some freedom of choice in the rhyme scheme of the sestet. I have chosen cdecde for this sequence.
Glossary:
Dun: a dull brown colour
Dreamfault: an invented portmanteau word, aiming to capture the idea of dreams being difficult to recapture in their entirety
Ruth: regret
Stricture: restriction
Hoar: whitish grey, as in hoar frost
Selkie: a mythical creature that resembles a seal in the water but assumes human form on land. Stories frequently revolve around female selkies being coerced into relationships with humans by someone stealing and hiding their sealskin, often not regaining the skin until years later upon which they commonly return to the sea, forsaking their human family.
Gestalt: an organized whole that is seen as more than the sum of its parts.
Polydorus: King Priam sent his youngest son, Polydorus, to Thrace, under the protection of King Polymester, in case Troy fell. When it did, Polymester threw him into the sea instead and stole all the gold that Priam had endowed him with.
The Anemone or windflower was said to have arisen from Aphrodite's tears as she mourned the death of Adonis.
Sith: an archaic variation of 'since', derived from the Old English 'siththa'.
The image, Midnight Echo, is reproduced under copyright by permission of the talented artist and poet, Sue Vincent.
See https://scvincent.com/painting/ for further examples of her work.
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