Characteristics of sonnets

There are four main requirements for sonnets: number of lines, rhyme pattern, sound groups, and beginnings, successions, and turns. Most of Shakespeare's sonnets have neat sound groups, and the rhyme style is either English style, freehand style, or both. They are both skillful and flexible, and they follow the rules of beginning, succession, transition, and union. They are very sonnet-like. flavor and charm.

What Sha Weng is best at is the last two lines of his poems, which are often strangely conceived and surprisingly eloquent. They are both the highlight of the poem and a self-contained aphorism.

Shakespeare’s sonnets have a rigorous structure. He divided the fourteen lines into two parts. The first part is three four lines, and the second part is two lines. Each line has ten syllables and rhyme. For: abab, cdcd, efef, gg. This format later became known as "Shakespearean" or "Elizabethan". For poets, the more rigorous the structure of a poem, the more difficult it is to be lyrical. However, Shakespeare's sonnets are unrestricted, free and unrestrained, and the language of poetry is full of imagination and emotion.

Content: Shakespeare's sonnets mainly take love, beauty, and time as themes, and surpass their predecessors in ideological depth.