Ottava rima: Difference between revisions
m robot Modifying: pl:Stanze Watykańskie |
Updated external links to new host |
||
Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
*[http://www.sensible.it/personal/resio/donjuan/byron/ Byron's ''Don Juan''] |
*[http://www.sensible.it/personal/resio/donjuan/byron/ Byron's ''Don Juan''] |
||
*[http://readytogoebooks.com/LB-Bp48.htm Byron's ''Beppo''] |
*[http://readytogoebooks.com/LB-Bp48.htm Byron's ''Beppo''] |
||
*[http://www. |
*[http://www.volecentral.co.uk/vf/ottava_rima.htm Elegy on a mainline terminus] Bob Newman's own example from the [http://www.volecentral.co.uk/vf/index.htm Guide to Verse forms] |
||
*[http://kresadlo.cz/obetina.htm The ''Offering''], (translation of the first few hundred lines from [[Jan Křesadlo]]'s modern epic parody) |
*[http://kresadlo.cz/obetina.htm The ''Offering''], (translation of the first few hundred lines from [[Jan Křesadlo]]'s modern epic parody) |
||
Revision as of 16:29, 16 December 2007
- For etymology and similar terms see Octave.
Ottava rima is a rhyming stanza form of Italian origin. Originally used for long poems on heroic themes, it also came to be popular in the writing of mock-heroic works. Its earliest known use is in the writings of Giovanni Boccaccio.
Form
The ottava rima stanza in English consists of eight iambic lines, usually iambic pentameters. Each stanza consists of three rhymes following the rhyme scheme a-b-a-b-a-b-c-c. The form is similar to the older Sicilian octave, but evolved separately and is unrelated. The Sicilian octave is derived from the medieval strambotto and was a crucial step in the development of the sonnet, whereas the ottava rima is related to the canzone, a stanza form.
History
Boccaccio used ottava rima for a number of minor poems and, most significantly, for two of his major works, the Teseide (1340) and the Filostrato (1347). These two poems defined the form as the main one to be used for epic poetry in Italian for the next two centuries. For instance, ottava rima was used by Poliziano and by Boiardo in his 1486 masterpiece Orlando Innamorato . The following year, Luigi Pulci published his Morgante Maggiore in which the mock-heroic, half-serious, half-burlesque use of the form that is most familiar to modern English-language readers first appeared. However, poets such as Ludovico Ariosto and Torquato Tasso continued to use ottava rima for serious epic poetry. It was later used in Italian libretti; perhaps the most famous example ends with the title of the comic opera Così fan tutte (1789).
In English, ottava rima first appeared in Elizabethan translations of Tasso and Ariosto. However, the form did not become popular for original works, and a section of William Browne's Britannia's Pastorals is the only known original work in the form that survives. The first English poet to write mock-heroic ottava rima was John Hookham Frere, whose 1817 poem Whistlecraft used the form to considerable effect. Byron read Frere's work and saw the potential of the form. He quickly produced Beppo, his first poem to use the form. Shortly after this, Byron began working on his Don Juan (1819-1824), probably the best-known English poem in ottava rima. Byron also used the form for his Vision of Judgment (1822). Shelley translated the Homeric Hymns into English in ottava rima. In the 20th century, William Butler Yeats used the form, with half rhyme, in several of his best later poems, including "Sailing to Byzantium" and "Among School Children".
Outside of Italian and English, ottava rima has not been widely used, although the Spanish poets Boscan, Alonso de Ercilla y Zúñiga and Lope de Vega all experimented with it at one time or another. It is also the meter of several medieval Yiddish epic poems, such as the Bovo-Bukh (1507-1508), which were adaptations of Italian epics.
Some examples
From Frere's Whistlecraft:
- But chiefly, when the shadowy moon had shed
- O'er woods and waters her mysterious hue,
- Their passive hearts and vacant fancies fed
- With thoughts and aspirations strange and new,
- Till their brute souls with inward working bred
- Dark hints that in the depths of instinct grew
- Subjection not from Locke's associations,
- Nor David Hartley's doctrine of vibrations.
- "Go, little book, from this my solitude!
- I cast thee on the waters – go thy ways!
- And if, as I believe, thy vein be good,
- The world will find thee after many days."
- When Southey 's read, and Wordsworth understood,
- I can't help putting in my claim to praise –
- The four first rhymes are Southey's every line:
- For God's sake, reader! take them not for mine.
External links
- Orlando Innamorato
- Byron's Don Juan
- Byron's Beppo
- Elegy on a mainline terminus Bob Newman's own example from the Guide to Verse forms
- The Offering, (translation of the first few hundred lines from Jan Křesadlo's modern epic parody)