Stanza is the cornerstone of formal poetry, such as a passage in a story or poetry in a song. They often have the same number of rows at one time and often use rhyming patterns repeated for each new section.
Shakespeare is a master of this poem. His sonnets have three sections, each with 4 rows, followed by 2 festivals, and at the end there is a very special prosody and rhythm pattern. Poems in poetry always have structures, but not all poems use poetry For example, free poetry is a wild poem without structure rules often.
Stance in poetry resembles a passage in prose. Sections and paragraphs contain the concept of connectivity, which is caused by space. Although the number of different types of midline differs, it is not uncommon for sections to exceed 12 lines. The mode of the section depends on the number of feet of each line, its rhythm and rhyme. Cestat is a 6-column section. It is the second branch of Italian or Petrarch sonnet, including eight rows, following the octave or first split. In Sonnets, Senet shows a change in the emotional state of the poet. It is because there are many subjective things in the second half of Sonnets.
These sonnets are divided into two sections. The first section contains 8 rows or octaves and the second section contains 6 rows or one sestet. In Italian sonnets there is a "bolt" or "turn" that represents a change from a poem proposal to a solution to that solution. Bolts are normally displayed in line 9. In 1591, Sonnet Philippe Sydney's sonnet "Astrophel and Stella" established the shape of British sonnet. Other prominent authors include Michael Drayton, Fulke Greville, and of course William Shakespeare. Although Shakespeare did not invent Sonnets, he wrote over 150 people in his life, and was one of the most prolific people.