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Villanelle

A villanelle, also known as villanesque,[1] is a nineteen-line poetic form consisting of five tercets followed by a quatrain. There are two refrains and two repeating rhymes, with the first and third line of the first tercet repeated alternately at the end of each subsequent stanza until the last stanza, which includes both repeated lines. The villanelle is an example of a fixed verse form. The word derives from Latin, then Italian, and is related to the initial subject of the form being the pastoral.

A classic pastoral scene, depicting a shepherd with his livestock; a pastoral subject was the initial distinguishing feature of the villanelle. Painting by Ferdinand Chaigneau [fr], 19th century.

The form started as a simple ballad-like song with no fixed form; this fixed quality would only come much later, from the poem "Villanelle (J'ay perdu ma Tourterelle)" (1606) by Jean Passerat. From this point, its evolution into the "fixed form" used in the present day is debated. Despite its French origins, the majority of villanelles have been written in English, a trend which began in the late nineteenth century. The villanelle has been noted as a form that frequently treats the subject of obsessions, and one which appeals to outsiders; its defining feature of repetition prevents it from having a conventional tone.

Etymology

The word villanelle derives from the Italian villanella, referring to a rustic song or dance,[2] and which comes from villano, meaning peasant or villein.[3] Villano derives from the Medieval Latin villanus, meaning a "farmhand".[4] The etymology of the word relates to the fact that the form's initial distinguishing feature was the pastoral subject.[2]

History

The villanelle originated as a simple ballad-like song—in imitation of peasant songs of an oral tradition—with no fixed poetic form. These poems were often of a rustic or pastoral subject matter and contained refrains.[5][6] Prior to the nineteenth century, the term would have simply meant country song, with no particular form implied—a meaning it retains in the vocabulary of early music.[7] According to Julie Kane, the refrain in each stanza indicates that the form descended from a "choral dance song" wherein a vocal soloist—frequently female—semi-improvised the "unique" lyrics of each stanza, while a ring of dancers—all female, or male and female mixed—chimed in with the repetitive words of the refrain as they danced around her in a circle."[8]

"Villanelle (J'ay perdu ma Tourterelle)"

J'ay perdu ma Tourterelle:
Est-ce point celle que j'oy?
Je veus aller aprés elle.

Tu regretes ta femelle,
Helas! aussi fai-je moy,
J'ay perdu ma Tourterelle.

(I have lost my turtledove:
Isn't that her gentle coo?
I will go and find my love.

Here you mourn your mated love;
Oh, God—I am mourning too:
I have lost my turtledove.)

The first two stanzas of "Villanelle (J'ay perdu ma Tourterelle)" by Jean Passerat (1534 – 1602), which established the modern villanelle form.[9]

The fixed-form villanelle, containing the nineteen-line dual-refrain, derives from Jean Passerat's poem "Villanelle (J'ay perdu ma Tourterelle)", published in 1606.[10] The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics (1993) suggests that this became the standard "villanelle" when prosodists such as César-Pierre Richelet based their definitions of the form on that poem.[2] This conclusion is refuted by Kane, however, who argues that it was instead Pierre-Charles Berthelin's additions to Richelet's Dictionnaire de rimes that first fixed the form, followed a century later by the poet Théodore de Banville;[11] his creation of a parody to Passerat's "J'ay perdu ..." would lead Wilhelm Ténint and others to think that the villanelle was an antique form.[12]

Despite its classification and origin as a French poetic form, by far the majority of villanelles have been written in English.[6] Subsequent to the publication of Théodore de Banville's treatise on prosody "Petit traité de poésie française" (1872), the form became popularised in England through Edmund Gosse and Austin Dobson.[13] Gosse, Dobson, Oscar Wilde, Andrew Lang and John Payne were among the first English practitioners—theirs and other works were published in Gleeson White's Ballades and Rondeaus, Chants Royal, Sestinas, Villanelles, &c. Selected (1887),[14] which contained thirty-two English-language villanelles composed by nineteen poets.[15]

Most modernists disdained the villanelle, which became associated with the overwrought formal aestheticism of the 1890s, i.e., the decadent movement in England.[16] In his 1914 novel A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, James Joyce includes a villanelle written by his protagonist Stephen Dedalus.[16] William Empson revived the villanelle more seriously in the 1930s,[17] and his contemporaries and friends W. H. Auden and Dylan Thomas also picked up the form.[18] Dylan Thomas's "Do not go gentle into that good night" is perhaps the most renowned villanelle of all. Theodore Roethke and Sylvia Plath wrote villanelles in the 1950s and 1960s,[18] and Elizabeth Bishop wrote a particularly famous and influential villanelle, "One Art," in 1976. The villanelle reached an unprecedented level of popularity in the 1980s and 1990s with the rise of the New Formalism.[19] Since then, many contemporary poets have written villanelles, and they have often varied the form in innovative ways; in their anthology of villanelles (Villanelles), Annie Finch and Marie-Elizabeth Mali devote a section entitled "Variations on the Villanelle" to such innovations.[20]

Form

The villanelle consists of five stanzas of three lines (tercets) followed by a single stanza of four lines (a quatrain) for a total of nineteen lines.[21] It is structured by two repeating rhymes and two refrains: the first line of the first stanza serves as the last line of the second and fourth stanzas, and the third line of the first stanza serves as the last line of the third and fifth stanzas.[21] The rhyme-and-refrain pattern of the villanelle can be schematized as A1bA2 abA1 abA2 abA1 abA2 abA1A2. Here, "a" and "A" lines rhyme, and A1 and A2 indicate two different refrains which are repeated exactly.[6]

The villanelle has no established meter,[22] although most 19th-century villanelles have used trimeter or tetrameter and most 20th-century villanelles have used pentameter. Slight alteration of the refrain line is permissible.[22]

Effect

With reference to the form's repetition of lines, Philip K. Jason suggests that the "villanelle is often used, and properly used, to deal with one or another degree of obsession"[23] citing Sylvia Plath's "Mad Girl's Love Song" amongst other examples. He notes the possibility for the form to evoke, through the relationship between the repeated lines, a feeling of dislocation and a "paradigm for schizophrenia".[23] This repetition of lines has been considered to prevent villanelles from possessing a "conventional tone"[24] and that instead they are closer in form to a song or lyric poetry.[24] Stephen Fry opines that the villanelle "is a form that seems to appeal to outsiders, or those who might have cause to consider themselves as such", having a "playful artifice" which suits "rueful, ironic reiteration of pain or fatalism".[25] (In spite of this, the villanelle has also often been used for light verse, as for instance Louis Untermeyer's "Lugubrious Villanelle of Platitudes".[26][27])

On the relationship between form and content, Anne Ridler notes in an introduction to her own poem "Villanelle for the Middle of the Way" a point made by T. S. Eliot, that "to use very strict form is a help, because you concentrate on the technical difficulties of mastering the form, and allow the content of the poem a more unconscious and freer release".[28] In an introduction to his own take on the form, entitled "Missing Dates", William Empson suggests that while the villanelle is a "very rigid form", nonetheless W. H. Auden—in his long poem The Sea and the Mirror—had "made it sound absolutely natural like the innocent girl talking".[29]

Examples

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Kastner 1903 p. 279
  2. ^ a b c Preminger 1993 p. 1358
  3. ^ "Villanelle". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  4. ^ "Villain". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  5. ^ Kane 2003 p. 428
  6. ^ a b c . Poets.org. Academy of American Poets. Archived from the original on 2012-10-13. Retrieved 2012-10-15.
  7. ^ French 2010 p. 245
  8. ^ Kane, Julie. "Introduction." Villanelles, ed. by Annie Finch and Marie-Elizabeth Mali.
  9. ^ French 2004 pp. 7–8
  10. ^ French 2003 p. 1
  11. ^ Kane 2003 pp. 440–41
  12. ^ French 2004 p. 30
  13. ^ Kane 2003 p. 441
  14. ^ White 1887 pp. xiii–xiv
  15. ^ Kane 2003 p. 442
  16. ^ a b Caroline Blyth, ed. (2011). Decadent verse : an anthology of late Victorian poetry, 1872–1900. London: Anthem Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-85728-403-7.
  17. ^ French 2004 p. 152
  18. ^ a b French 2004 p. 15
  19. ^ French 2004 p. 13
  20. ^ Fitch et al. 2012
  21. ^ a b Strand et al. 2001 p. 7
  22. ^ a b Fry 2007, p. 225
  23. ^ a b Jason 1980 p. 141
  24. ^ a b Strand et al. 2001, p. 8
  25. ^ Fry 2007, p. 228
  26. ^ Cohen, Helen (1922). Lyric Forms from France: Their History and Their Use. Harcourt Brace and Company.
  27. ^ French 2004 p. 147
  28. ^ . The Poetry Archive. Archived from the original on July 24, 2006. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  29. ^ "Missing Dates". The Poetry Archive. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  30. ^ . The Poetry Archive. Archived from the original on February 12, 2010. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  31. ^ Benstock, Bernard (1976). "The Temptation of St. Stephen: A View of the Villanelle". James Joyce Quarterly. 14 (1): 31–8. JSTOR 25476025. (subscription required)
  32. ^ Rossman, Charles (1975). "Stephen Dedalus' Villanelle". James Joyce Quarterly. 12 (3): 281–93. JSTOR 25487187. (subscription required)
  33. ^ Ali, Agha Shahid (1997). The Country Without a Post Office. New Delhi: Orient Blackswan. p. 61. ISBN 978-81-7530-037-8.
  34. ^ Shirley., Conner (1997). Migrations. Antioch, IL: Nichol Publications. ISBN 0961226293. OCLC 37955831.

References

  • Finch, Annie; Mali, Marie-Elizabeth, eds. (2012). Villanelles. Everyman's Library. ISBN 978-0-307-95786-3.
  • French, Amanda L. (2003). "The First Villanelle: A New Translation of Jean Passerat's 'J'ay perdu ma tourterelle' (1574)" (PDF). Meridian. 12.
  • French, Amanda L. (2004). "Refrain, Again: The Return of the Villanelle" (PDF). University of Virginia.
  • French, Amanda L. (2010). "Edmund Gosse and the Stubborn Villanelle Blunder". Victorian Poetry. 48 (2): 243–266. doi:10.1353/vp.0.0104. S2CID 161093800. (subscription required)
  • Fry, Stephen (2007). The Ode Less Travelled. UK: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0-09-950934-9.
  • Gasparov, M. L. (1996). A History of European Versification. UK: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-815879-0.
  • Jason, Philip K. (1980). "Modern Versions of the Villanelle". College Literature. 7 (2): 136–145. JSTOR 25111324. (subscription required)
  • Kane, Julie (2003). "The Myth of the Fixed-Form Villanelle". Modern Language Quarterly. 64 (4): 427–43. doi:10.1215/00267929-64-4-427. S2CID 161541323. (subscription required)
  • Kastner, L. E. (1903). A History of French Versification. UK: Clarendon Press.
  • Lennard, John (2006). The Poetry Handbook. UK: Oxford University Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-19-926538-1.
  • Padgett, Ron, ed. (2000). The Teachers and Writers Handbook of Poetic Forms (2nd ed.). New York: Teachers & Writers Collaborative. ISBN 0-915924-61-7.
  • Preminger, Alex (1993). The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-03271-8.
  • Strand, Mark; Boland, Eavan (2001). The Making of a Poem: A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms. US: Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-32178-4.
  • White, Gleeson, ed. (1887). Ballades and Rondeaus, Chants Royal, Sestinas, Villanelles, etc. The Canterbury Poets. The Walter Scott Publishing Co., Ltd.

Further reading

  • McFarland, Robert (1982). "Victorian Villanelle". Victorian Poetry. 20 (12): 125–138. JSTOR 40002150. (subscription required)
  • Pierce, Robert B. (2003). "Defining Poetry". Philosophy and Literature. 27 (1): 151–163. doi:10.1353/phl.2003.0030. S2CID 201779079. (subscription required)

External links

villanelle, this, article, about, poetic, form, fictional, character, killing, character, other, uses, disambiguation, villanelle, also, known, villanesque, nineteen, line, poetic, form, consisting, five, tercets, followed, quatrain, there, refrains, repeating. This article is about the poetic form For the fictional character in Killing Eve see Villanelle character For other uses see Villanelle disambiguation A villanelle also known as villanesque 1 is a nineteen line poetic form consisting of five tercets followed by a quatrain There are two refrains and two repeating rhymes with the first and third line of the first tercet repeated alternately at the end of each subsequent stanza until the last stanza which includes both repeated lines The villanelle is an example of a fixed verse form The word derives from Latin then Italian and is related to the initial subject of the form being the pastoral A classic pastoral scene depicting a shepherd with his livestock a pastoral subject was the initial distinguishing feature of the villanelle Painting by Ferdinand Chaigneau fr 19th century The form started as a simple ballad like song with no fixed form this fixed quality would only come much later from the poem Villanelle J ay perdu ma Tourterelle 1606 by Jean Passerat From this point its evolution into the fixed form used in the present day is debated Despite its French origins the majority of villanelles have been written in English a trend which began in the late nineteenth century The villanelle has been noted as a form that frequently treats the subject of obsessions and one which appeals to outsiders its defining feature of repetition prevents it from having a conventional tone Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Form 4 Effect 5 Examples 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymology EditThe word villanelle derives from the Italian villanella referring to a rustic song or dance 2 and which comes from villano meaning peasant or villein 3 Villano derives from the Medieval Latin villanus meaning a farmhand 4 The etymology of the word relates to the fact that the form s initial distinguishing feature was the pastoral subject 2 History EditThe villanelle originated as a simple ballad like song in imitation of peasant songs of an oral tradition with no fixed poetic form These poems were often of a rustic or pastoral subject matter and contained refrains 5 6 Prior to the nineteenth century the term would have simply meant country song with no particular form implied a meaning it retains in the vocabulary of early music 7 According to Julie Kane the refrain in each stanza indicates that the form descended from a choral dance song wherein a vocal soloist frequently female semi improvised the unique lyrics of each stanza while a ring of dancers all female or male and female mixed chimed in with the repetitive words of the refrain as they danced around her in a circle 8 Villanelle J ay perdu ma Tourterelle J ay perdu ma Tourterelle Est ce point celle que j oy Je veus aller apres elle Tu regretes ta femelle Helas aussi fai je moy J ay perdu ma Tourterelle I have lost my turtledove Isn t that her gentle coo I will go and find my love Here you mourn your mated love Oh God I am mourning too I have lost my turtledove The first two stanzas of Villanelle J ay perdu ma Tourterelle by Jean Passerat 1534 1602 which established the modern villanelle form 9 The fixed form villanelle containing the nineteen line dual refrain derives from Jean Passerat s poem Villanelle J ay perdu ma Tourterelle published in 1606 10 The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics 1993 suggests that this became the standard villanelle when prosodists such as Cesar Pierre Richelet based their definitions of the form on that poem 2 This conclusion is refuted by Kane however who argues that it was instead Pierre Charles Berthelin s additions to Richelet s Dictionnaire de rimes that first fixed the form followed a century later by the poet Theodore de Banville 11 his creation of a parody to Passerat s J ay perdu would lead Wilhelm Tenint and others to think that the villanelle was an antique form 12 Despite its classification and origin as a French poetic form by far the majority of villanelles have been written in English 6 Subsequent to the publication of Theodore de Banville s treatise on prosody Petit traite de poesie francaise 1872 the form became popularised in England through Edmund Gosse and Austin Dobson 13 Gosse Dobson Oscar Wilde Andrew Lang and John Payne were among the first English practitioners theirs and other works were published in Gleeson White s Ballades and Rondeaus Chants Royal Sestinas Villanelles amp c Selected 1887 14 which contained thirty two English language villanelles composed by nineteen poets 15 Most modernists disdained the villanelle which became associated with the overwrought formal aestheticism of the 1890s i e the decadent movement in England 16 In his 1914 novel A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man James Joyce includes a villanelle written by his protagonist Stephen Dedalus 16 William Empson revived the villanelle more seriously in the 1930s 17 and his contemporaries and friends W H Auden and Dylan Thomas also picked up the form 18 Dylan Thomas s Do not go gentle into that good night is perhaps the most renowned villanelle of all Theodore Roethke and Sylvia Plath wrote villanelles in the 1950s and 1960s 18 and Elizabeth Bishop wrote a particularly famous and influential villanelle One Art in 1976 The villanelle reached an unprecedented level of popularity in the 1980s and 1990s with the rise of the New Formalism 19 Since then many contemporary poets have written villanelles and they have often varied the form in innovative ways in their anthology of villanelles Villanelles Annie Finch and Marie Elizabeth Mali devote a section entitled Variations on the Villanelle to such innovations 20 Form EditThe villanelle consists of five stanzas of three lines tercets followed by a single stanza of four lines a quatrain for a total of nineteen lines 21 It is structured by two repeating rhymes and two refrains the first line of the first stanza serves as the last line of the second and fourth stanzas and the third line of the first stanza serves as the last line of the third and fifth stanzas 21 The rhyme and refrain pattern of the villanelle can be schematized as A1bA2 abA1 abA2 abA1 abA2 abA1A2 Here a and A lines rhyme and A1 and A2 indicate two different refrains which are repeated exactly 6 The villanelle has no established meter 22 although most 19th century villanelles have used trimeter or tetrameter and most 20th century villanelles have used pentameter Slight alteration of the refrain line is permissible 22 Effect EditWith reference to the form s repetition of lines Philip K Jason suggests that the villanelle is often used and properly used to deal with one or another degree of obsession 23 citing Sylvia Plath s Mad Girl s Love Song amongst other examples He notes the possibility for the form to evoke through the relationship between the repeated lines a feeling of dislocation and a paradigm for schizophrenia 23 This repetition of lines has been considered to prevent villanelles from possessing a conventional tone 24 and that instead they are closer in form to a song or lyric poetry 24 Stephen Fry opines that the villanelle is a form that seems to appeal to outsiders or those who might have cause to consider themselves as such having a playful artifice which suits rueful ironic reiteration of pain or fatalism 25 In spite of this the villanelle has also often been used for light verse as for instance Louis Untermeyer s Lugubrious Villanelle of Platitudes 26 27 On the relationship between form and content Anne Ridler notes in an introduction to her own poem Villanelle for the Middle of the Way a point made by T S Eliot that to use very strict form is a help because you concentrate on the technical difficulties of mastering the form and allow the content of the poem a more unconscious and freer release 28 In an introduction to his own take on the form entitled Missing Dates William Empson suggests that while the villanelle is a very rigid form nonetheless W H Auden in his long poem The Sea and the Mirror had made it sound absolutely natural like the innocent girl talking 29 Examples Edit Do not go gentle into that good night by Dylan Thomas 30 Halt Dynamos by Francis Heaney in his Holy Tango of Literature A parody of Do not go gentle into that good night The Waking by Theodore Roethke Mad Girl s Love Song by Sylvia Plath One Art by Elizabeth Bishop If I Could Tell You poem and Miranda by W H Auden Edwin Arlington Robinson s villanelle The House on the Hill was first published in The Globe in September 1894 Are you not weary of ardent ways the villanelle written by Stephen Dedalus the protagonist of James Joyce s novel A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man It has been the subject of several critical analyses 31 32 The World and the Child from Water Street by James Merrill A Villanelle by Agha Shahid Ali from his collection The Country Without a Post Office published 1997 33 A Villanelle for Our Time by F R Scott set to music by Leonard Cohen on his album Dear Heather Hate the Villanelle a song by They Might Be Giants first performed at the Brooklyn Academy of Music Howar Gilman Opera House in June 2014 Broad Arrow Cafe by Joe Dolce was first published in Signs the 2018 University of Canberra Vice Chancellor s Poetry Prize anthology Living in the Woods by Shirley Conner 34 Villanelle of the Poet s Road by Ernest Dowson Ref The Oxford Book of Modern Verse 1892 1935 Pub Oxford Clarendon Press 1939 My Darling Turns to Poetry at Night by Anthony Lawrence was first published by Poetry in May 2016 The villanelle is what by John M Ford Villanelle by poet Marilyn HackerSee also EditVillanella an Italian song form with a rustic theme Paradelle a poetic form created by Billy Collins and originating as a parody of the villanelle Terzanelle a poetic form combining aspects of the terza rima and villanelle Villanelle Poulenc piece of chamber music composed in 1934 It was written for recorder and piano Notes Edit Kastner 1903 p 279 a b c Preminger 1993 p 1358 Villanelle Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 15 October 2012 Villain Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 15 October 2012 Kane 2003 p 428 a b c Poetic Form Villanelle Poets org Academy of American Poets Archived from the original on 2012 10 13 Retrieved 2012 10 15 French 2010 p 245 Kane Julie Introduction Villanelles ed by Annie Finch and Marie Elizabeth Mali French 2004 pp 7 8 French 2003 p 1 Kane 2003 pp 440 41 French 2004 p 30 Kane 2003 p 441 White 1887 pp xiii xiv Kane 2003 p 442 a b Caroline Blyth ed 2011 Decadent verse an anthology of late Victorian poetry 1872 1900 London Anthem Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 85728 403 7 French 2004 p 152 a b French 2004 p 15 French 2004 p 13 Fitch et al 2012 a b Strand et al 2001 p 7 a b Fry 2007 p 225 a b Jason 1980 p 141 a b Strand et al 2001 p 8 Fry 2007 p 228 Cohen Helen 1922 Lyric Forms from France Their History and Their Use Harcourt Brace and Company French 2004 p 147 Villanelle for the Middle of the Way The Poetry Archive Archived from the original on July 24 2006 Retrieved 7 February 2014 Missing Dates The Poetry Archive Retrieved 7 February 2014 Villanelle The Poetry Archive Archived from the original on February 12 2010 Retrieved 7 February 2014 Benstock Bernard 1976 The Temptation of St Stephen A View of the Villanelle James Joyce Quarterly 14 1 31 8 JSTOR 25476025 subscription required Rossman Charles 1975 Stephen Dedalus Villanelle James Joyce Quarterly 12 3 281 93 JSTOR 25487187 subscription required Ali Agha Shahid 1997 The Country Without a Post Office New Delhi Orient Blackswan p 61 ISBN 978 81 7530 037 8 Shirley Conner 1997 Migrations Antioch IL Nichol Publications ISBN 0961226293 OCLC 37955831 References EditFinch Annie Mali Marie Elizabeth eds 2012 Villanelles Everyman s Library ISBN 978 0 307 95786 3 French Amanda L 2003 The First Villanelle A New Translation of Jean Passerat s J ay perdu ma tourterelle 1574 PDF Meridian 12 French Amanda L 2004 Refrain Again The Return of the Villanelle PDF University of Virginia French Amanda L 2010 Edmund Gosse and the Stubborn Villanelle Blunder Victorian Poetry 48 2 243 266 doi 10 1353 vp 0 0104 S2CID 161093800 subscription required Fry Stephen 2007 The Ode Less Travelled UK Arrow Books ISBN 978 0 09 950934 9 Gasparov M L 1996 A History of European Versification UK Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 815879 0 Jason Philip K 1980 Modern Versions of the Villanelle College Literature 7 2 136 145 JSTOR 25111324 subscription required Kane Julie 2003 The Myth of the Fixed Form Villanelle Modern Language Quarterly 64 4 427 43 doi 10 1215 00267929 64 4 427 S2CID 161541323 subscription required Kastner L E 1903 A History of French Versification UK Clarendon Press Lennard John 2006 The Poetry Handbook UK Oxford University Press p 52 ISBN 978 0 19 926538 1 Padgett Ron ed 2000 The Teachers and Writers Handbook of Poetic Forms 2nd ed New York Teachers amp Writers Collaborative ISBN 0 915924 61 7 Preminger Alex 1993 The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 03271 8 Strand Mark Boland Eavan 2001 The Making of a Poem A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms US Norton ISBN 978 0 393 32178 4 White Gleeson ed 1887 Ballades and Rondeaus Chants Royal Sestinas Villanelles etc The Canterbury Poets The Walter Scott Publishing Co Ltd Further reading EditMcFarland Robert 1982 Victorian Villanelle Victorian Poetry 20 12 125 138 JSTOR 40002150 subscription required Pierce Robert B 2003 Defining Poetry Philosophy and Literature 27 1 151 163 doi 10 1353 phl 2003 0030 S2CID 201779079 subscription required External links Edit Look up villanelle in Wiktionary the free dictionary Gosse Edmund William 1911 Villanelle Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed p 73 List of Villanelles at Poetry Foundation Description and Examples of the villanelle from a web page for a course taught by poet Alberto Rios The Villanelle Sandwich a parody example from the webcomic Cat and Girl by Dorothy Gambrell Poem of the Week May 27 2008 from The Guardian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Villanelle amp oldid 1126946529, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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