William Shakespeare’s Romeo & Juliet Act 1 Scene 5 Sonnet / Iambic Pentamter
ROMEO  If I profane with my unworthiest  hand This holy shrine, the gentle fine is  this : My lips, two blushing pilgrims, ready  stand To smooth that rough touch with a tender  kiss 1st Quatrain (4 line stanza) in rhyme scheme  A B A B
JULIET Good pilgrim, you do wrong your hand too  much , Which mannerly devotion shows in  this For saints have hands that pilgrims' hands do  touch And palm to palm is holy palmers'  kiss 2nd Quatrain (4 line stanza) in rhyme scheme  C D C D
ROMEO Have not saints lips, and holy palmers  too JULIET  Ay, pilgrim, lips that they must use in  prayer . ROMEO Then, dear saint, let lips do what hands  do They pray, grant thou, lest faith turn to  despair 3rd Quatrain (4 line stanza) in rhyme scheme  E F E F
JULIET Saints do not move, though grant for prayers'  sake . ROMEO Then move not, while my prayer's effect I  take Couplet (2 line stanza) in rhyme scheme  GG
First quatrain : An  exposition  of the main theme and  main metaphor . Second quatrain : Theme and  metaphor extended  or complicated; often, some imaginative example is given. Third quatrain : Peripeteia ( twist or conflict ), often introduced by a "but" (very often leading off the  ninth line ). Couplet :  Summarizes  and leaves the reader with a new,  concluding image .
1st Quatrain  sets up  metaphor  of Romeo as unworthy yet aggressive  Pilgrim 2nd Quatrain  extends metaphor previously established and  complicates  it with the idea of  Juliet as a saint 3rd Quatrain  introduces the  dilemma  of the  kiss .  Also  foreshadows  future conflict. Couplet   concludes  they will kiss however  Juliet will not actively participate ; she allows  Romeo to act .
When Romeo and Juliet meet they speak just  fourteen lines  before their first kiss. These fourteen lines make up a  shared sonnet   (resembles a relationship). A   sonnet  is a perfect, idealized poetic form often used to write about  love . Encapsulating the moment of origin of Romeo and Juliet’s love within a sonnet therefore creates a  perfect match between literary content and formal style.
The use of the  sonnet also serves a second, darker purpose .  The play’s  Prologue is a single sonnet of the same rhyme scheme  as Romeo and Juliet’s shared sonnet (iambic pentameter). The Prologue sonnet introduces the play and, through its description of Romeo and Juliet’s eventual death, also creates the sense of fate that permeates Romeo and Juliet.  The  shared sonnet therefore creates a formal link between their love and their destiny . With a single sonnet, Shakespeare finds a means of  expressing perfect love and linking it to a tragic fate .
Opposition Word Play Shakespeare’s Craft
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SHAKESPEARE: IAMBIC PENTAMETER

  • 1.
    William Shakespeare’s Romeo& Juliet Act 1 Scene 5 Sonnet / Iambic Pentamter
  • 2.
    ROMEO IfI profane with my unworthiest hand This holy shrine, the gentle fine is this : My lips, two blushing pilgrims, ready stand To smooth that rough touch with a tender kiss 1st Quatrain (4 line stanza) in rhyme scheme A B A B
  • 3.
    JULIET Good pilgrim,you do wrong your hand too much , Which mannerly devotion shows in this For saints have hands that pilgrims' hands do touch And palm to palm is holy palmers' kiss 2nd Quatrain (4 line stanza) in rhyme scheme C D C D
  • 4.
    ROMEO Have notsaints lips, and holy palmers too JULIET Ay, pilgrim, lips that they must use in prayer . ROMEO Then, dear saint, let lips do what hands do They pray, grant thou, lest faith turn to despair 3rd Quatrain (4 line stanza) in rhyme scheme E F E F
  • 5.
    JULIET Saints donot move, though grant for prayers' sake . ROMEO Then move not, while my prayer's effect I take Couplet (2 line stanza) in rhyme scheme GG
  • 6.
    First quatrain :An exposition of the main theme and main metaphor . Second quatrain : Theme and metaphor extended or complicated; often, some imaginative example is given. Third quatrain : Peripeteia ( twist or conflict ), often introduced by a "but" (very often leading off the ninth line ). Couplet : Summarizes and leaves the reader with a new, concluding image .
  • 7.
    1st Quatrain sets up metaphor of Romeo as unworthy yet aggressive Pilgrim 2nd Quatrain extends metaphor previously established and complicates it with the idea of Juliet as a saint 3rd Quatrain introduces the dilemma of the kiss . Also foreshadows future conflict. Couplet concludes they will kiss however Juliet will not actively participate ; she allows Romeo to act .
  • 8.
    When Romeo andJuliet meet they speak just fourteen lines before their first kiss. These fourteen lines make up a shared sonnet (resembles a relationship). A sonnet is a perfect, idealized poetic form often used to write about love . Encapsulating the moment of origin of Romeo and Juliet’s love within a sonnet therefore creates a perfect match between literary content and formal style.
  • 9.
    The use ofthe sonnet also serves a second, darker purpose . The play’s Prologue is a single sonnet of the same rhyme scheme as Romeo and Juliet’s shared sonnet (iambic pentameter). The Prologue sonnet introduces the play and, through its description of Romeo and Juliet’s eventual death, also creates the sense of fate that permeates Romeo and Juliet. The shared sonnet therefore creates a formal link between their love and their destiny . With a single sonnet, Shakespeare finds a means of expressing perfect love and linking it to a tragic fate .
  • 10.
    Opposition Word PlayShakespeare’s Craft
  • 11.

Editor's Notes

  • #11 What fray was here…tell me not for I have heard it all…heres MUCH TO DO WITH HATE BUT MORE WITH LOVE…WHY THEN OF BRAWLING LOVE OH LOVING THE OH ANYTHING OF NOTHING FIRST CREATE, OH HEAVY LIGHTNESS SERIOUS VANITY MISHAPEN CHAOS OF WELLSEEMING FORMS FEATHER OF LEAD COLD FIRE SICK HEALTH STILL WAKING SLEEP THIS LOVE FEEL I THAT FEEL NO LOVE IN THIS