Today, I need you to look at "Nani" and "Farm Implements and Rutabagas in a Landscape" and look at the sestina form. We can do this in a small group. I need you to make notes (I might collect these) on both poems. Email me if you have questions.
Sestina (we will look at "Nani" and "Farm Implements and Rutabagas in a Landscape"): https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47763/farm-implements-and-rutabagas-in-a-landscape
https://poets.org/poem/nani

For a humorous introduction go here
One of the most complex forms. Here is an overview of the form from poets.org
The
sestina is a complex form that achieves its often spectacular effects
through intricate repetition. The thirty-nine-line form is attributed to
Arnaut Daniel, the Provencal troubadour of the twelfth century. The
name "troubadour" likely comes from trobar, which means "to invent or
compose verse." The troubadours sang their verses accompanied by music
and were quite competitive, each trying to top the next in wit, as well
as complexity and difficulty of style.
Courtly love often was the
theme of the troubadours, and this emphasis continued as the sestina
migrated to Italy, where Dante and Petrarch practiced the form with
great reverence for Daniel, who, as Petrarch said, was "the first among
all others, great master of love."
The sestina follows a strict
pattern of the repetition of the initial six end-words of the first
stanza through the remaining five six-line stanzas, culminating in a
three-line envoi. The lines may be of any length, though in its initial
incarnation, the sestina followed a syllabic restriction. The form is as
follows, where each numeral indicates the stanza position and the
letters represent end-words:
1. ABCDEF
2. FAEBDC
3. CFDABE
4. ECBFAD
5. DEACFB
6. BDFECA
7. (envoi) ECA or ACE
The
envoi, sometimes known as the tornada, must also include the remaining
three end-words, BDF, in the course of the three lines so that all six
recurring words appear in the final three lines. In place of a rhyme
scheme, the sestina relies on end-word repetition to effect a sort of
rhyme.
Go here for another sestina
Elements: Know both definitions and examples
Imagery, denotation, connotation, irony – verbal, situational, dramatic, sarcasm, metaphor, personification, metonymy, apostrophe, synecdoche, symbol, allegory, paradox, overstatement, understatement, allusion, tone, alliteration, assonance, consonance, internal rime, slant rime, end rime, approximate rime, refrain, meter, iamb, trochee, anapest, dactyl, spondee, monosyllabic foot, line, stanza, cacophony, caesura, enjambment, onomatopoeia
Forms:
Structure, line breaks, how the poem looks, rhyme and rhythm and how it is created
Blues, Sestina, Villanelle, Pantoum, Sonnet (English, Italian, Spenserian, and hybrid), haiku, quatrain, tercets, couplets, litany, ballad.
Poems:
“Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” “Home Burial” “Heights of Machu Picchu” “The Flea” “My Last Duchess” “The Wastelands” “To His Coy Mistress”, “The Waste Lands” “Nani” “The Colonel” “One Art” “Fern Hill” “The Waking” “My Mistress’ Eyes” “The Second Coming”
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