
One of the reasons I write these posts is so that a few readers, interested in meter and rhyme, might want to try out poetry. After you’ve read up on Sonnets, take a look at some of my poetry.Updated and expanded Ma– Miltonic Sonnet, Nonce Sonnet, Links to Various Sonnet Sequences and additional Sonnets.Ma– John Donne & his Sonnet Death be not proud….Ma– Sir Phillip Sidney: His Meter and his Sonnets.– New Post : Bright Star by John Keats, His Sonnet.– New Post : John Donne & Batter my Heart, His Sonnet.

JanuBy upinvermont in About Sonnets, Anadiplosis, Antimetabole, Epanalepsis, Formal Poetry, Iambic Pentameter, Keats, John, Meter, Millay, Edna St Vincent, Poetry, Polyptoton, Rhyme, Sonnet Tags: Annotated Sonnet, Best Poetry Blog, Better Poetry Blog, Edna St Vincent, Elizabeth Barret Browning, Good Poetry Blog, Great Poet, Great Poetry Blog, Great Poets, Henry Howard, Heroic Couplet, iambic, Iambic Pentameter, Iambic Pentameter & Milton, Iambic Pentameter & Sonnet 129, Iambic Pentameter and Sonnet 75, Italian Quatrain, Italian Sestet, John, John Donne, John Milton's Meter, Keats, Keats Rhyme Scheme, Millay, Millay Rhyme Scheme, Milton Rhyme Scheme, Nonce Sonnet, Octave, Ozymandias, Percy Bysshe, Peter Sadlon, Petrarch, Petrarchan Sonnet, Quatrain, Rhyme, Rhyme Scheme, Scansion, Sestet, Shakespeare Rhyme Scheme, Shakespeare's Sonnet 129, Shakespearean Sonnet, Shelley, Shelley Rhyme Scheme, Sicilian Quatrain, Sicilian Sestet, Sir Philip Sidney, Sir Thomas Wyatt, Sonnet, Sonnet 129, Sonnet 75, Sonnet Form, Sonnets from the Portuguese, Spenser Rhyme Scheme, Spenser's Sonnet 75, Spenserian Sonnet, William, William Shakespeare, Wordsworth 171 Comments
