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A six-line stanza or the last six lines of a Petrarchan sonnet.
"When I have fears that I may cease to be Before my pen has gleaned my teeming brain."
When you read a poem, look for patterns that match Sestet. Note where it appears (line breaks, stanza positions), how often it repeats, and what emotion or emphasis it creates. Try underlining each instance, then ask: what changes if it’s removed?
A common mistake is confusing Sestet with nearby concepts listed in ‘See also.’ Always check its defining feature: the formal rule or effect that makes it Sestet, not just a similar device.
In essays, define Sestet briefly, cite a short quotation, and explain the *specific* effect on tone, pacing, or imagery. Tie the effect to the poem’s theme rather than describing the device in isolation.
Which line uses Sestet most clearly?
Tip: pick the line that shows the device’s defining feature.