Poetry Forms Analysis

This analysis covers three specific poetry forms: sonnet, villanelle and ode. To complete this
assignment, you will first download and print the Poetry Forms note sheet to fill in as you listen
to the poetry forms multi-media presentation. The note sheet is in the weekly handouts folder,
and the presentation is linked under the Week 3 Learning Resources.
Following the presentation, you will assess your understanding of these forms by reading and
analyzing all three types of poems. Please type your responses in a word processing file and
submit to the course site (don’t forget the questions on page 2 of this handout!). Remember
that you must cite specific examples from the text to support and illustrate your answers.
Note: you may use your poetry forms notes, chapters 8, 9, & 10 from An Introduction to Poetry:
A Complete Online Course to answer these questions. The poems themselves are linked in the
Week 3 agenda under Poetry Readings and Activities.
A. Sonnet Assessment
Read the following two sonnets and then answer the following four questions.
"Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day" by William Shakespeare
"My Mistress' Eyes are Nothing Like the Sun" by William Shakespeare

  1. "Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day" is considered one of the most famous and
    greatest love poems. Shakespeare is claiming that his love is far more beautiful even
    than a summer's day. What qualities of his lover (read beyond just beauty) are superior
    to a summer day? (5 pts)
  2. Paraphrase the couplet (the last two lines) in “Shall I Compare”; what is Shakespeare
    saying about art (i.e. this poem) and love? (5 pts.)
  3. In the sonnet “My Mistress’ Eyes,” the reader might first think Shakespeare is saying his
    mistress (beloved or chosen one) is not beautiful; however, this poem is saying quite the
    contrary. In this poem, he is refusing to utilize the cliché or excess metaphor, and he
    actually asserts the beauty of his beloved in the last two lines. Paraphrase (put into your
    own words) the last two lines. (5 pts.)
  4. What do these two sonnets say about the nature or capability of poetry? (5 pts.)