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Sonnet Step #1: read and summarize general message Step #2: translate lines into your own words Step #3: learn about sonnets Step #4: analyze each quatrain Step #5: analyze the

Sonnet Step #1: read and summarize general message Step #2: translate lines into your own words Step #3: learn about sonnets Step #4: analyze each quatrain

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Page 1: Sonnet Step #1: read and summarize general message Step #2: translate lines into your own words Step #3: learn about sonnets Step #4: analyze each quatrain

Sonnet

• Step #1: read and summarize general message

• Step #2: translate lines into your own words

• Step #3: learn about sonnets

• Step #4: analyze each quatrain

• Step #5: analyze the ending couplet

• Step #6: final, refined analysis

Page 2: Sonnet Step #1: read and summarize general message Step #2: translate lines into your own words Step #3: learn about sonnets Step #4: analyze each quatrain

Common Themes

• Love• Life• Death• Immortality• Youth• Beauty

Page 3: Sonnet Step #1: read and summarize general message Step #2: translate lines into your own words Step #3: learn about sonnets Step #4: analyze each quatrain

Sonnet

• 14 lines• Three quatrains (4 lines + 4 lines + 4

lines)• A rhyming couplet (2 lines)• The three quatrains present a topic of

argument• Couplet represents a solution

Page 4: Sonnet Step #1: read and summarize general message Step #2: translate lines into your own words Step #3: learn about sonnets Step #4: analyze each quatrain

Sonnet

• First quatrain: An explanation of a complex theme or conflict• Second quatrain: Theme and metaphor extended or complicated further• Third quatrain: Volta (a turn), often introduced by a "but" • The rhyming couplet: summarizes and leaves the reader with an epiphany

Page 5: Sonnet Step #1: read and summarize general message Step #2: translate lines into your own words Step #3: learn about sonnets Step #4: analyze each quatrain

Epiphany

•A sudden leap in understanding•They are usually unpredictable or sudden•The arrival at some truth that makes everything else clear•Light bulb analogy

Page 6: Sonnet Step #1: read and summarize general message Step #2: translate lines into your own words Step #3: learn about sonnets Step #4: analyze each quatrain

Volta• Author and historian Paul Fussell calls the volta "indispensable”. • He states further that "the turn is the dramatic and climactic center of the poem, the place where the intellectual or emotional method of release first becomes clear and possible. Surely no sonnet succeeds as a sonnet that does not execute at the turn something analogous to the general kinds of 'release' with which the reader’s muscles and nervous system are familiar”