Sonnet on Chillon is an Italian Sonnet. This form is important because conflict is settled at the end of the octet. After setting up the conflict and paradox, and presenting the metaphor of liberty as a beloved mother who must be betrayed by her children in order for tyranny to triumph, the speaker ends the octet saying Their country conquers with their martyrdom, And freedom 's fame finds wings on every wind. (7/8). Tyranny, by locking up liberty 's sons in damp vaults (6) succeeds only in creating martyrs whose example inspires the people, leading to their downfall.
The rhyme scheme in the octet follows the pattern of a typical Italian Sonnet, A, B, B, A, B, C, C, B. The first quatrain uses auditory rhymes Mind! (1) and bind (4), art (2) and heart (3). The second quatrain though, is all site rhymes, consigned (5) and wind (8), gloom (6) and martyrdom (7). This auditory dissonance forces the reader to slow down by breaking the rhythm of of the poem, making the reader think more about the speaker 's message and acknowledge the seriousness of the speakers intent.
After placing the reader in a position of finality, with the conflict already resolved and the speakers views made clear, the use of the Italian Form allows the speaker to continue. The sextet
Cited: yron, Lord. "Sonnett on Chillon". Byzant Scriptorium. 18 September 2009