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Assalamualaikum. Good morning everybody. How are
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you today? Good. I don't see many students here.
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Right. Today, I'm going to surprise you and slow
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down the class. I know that we're expected to have
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Sydney, but it seems like we have to slow down
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here in order to give time for other classes to
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catch up. So it's our chance today to look back
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again at rhyme, rhythm, and some areas in the
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critical plan. But before we start, you know, as
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usual, I need somebody like to read a report. Yes?
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Hate you, Mr. Report. At the beginning of my
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report, let me begin with admission that I hate
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writing reports, even though I like the class of
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poetry. Feeling that you have nothing to write
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about feeling, that you have nothing to write
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about feeling makes me hate the assignment of
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writing reports. But I like writing reports
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because it is at least has a theme or idea to work
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on and write about. To talk about love picture, it
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was enjoyable there. I didn't feel the time
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passing us. It was a nice lecture to learn about
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metaphor, irony, and image. After I just know
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little about them, I feel that those figures are
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the heart of poetry, that there is no poem without
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a figurative language that enhances and
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strengthens the idea of the poet, learning the way
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to use it makes a joy to use such language in our
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everyday language to express our gladness,
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sadness, and even sarcastic everyday life
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situations. Good, thank you. I do agree sometimes
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it gets, you know, a boring process like to write
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a report. And here, like, comes the creativity.
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When you have, when you don't know what you are
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going to write about. So you might look for a
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hook. you might find very interesting hook and
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then you write report. So the report is like to
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get you to write. And don't forget, this is like
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the bonus mark. It's not one of the official
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assignment. So you don't have to complain, but
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it's okay. You can do that. But I need you to
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write. Okay, let's see another report. Yes,
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please.
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Daily Reporter. Description of spring was so nice.
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It was the title of the previous month. The
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previous lecture was extremely surprising. Gentle
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and kind, I tried continuously to make up my mind
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and decide, either to share or to be in a side.
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Although the lecturer was in a gut mood, the
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students were worried and wanted to conclude. He
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asked the questions and students replied, but
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because of the hot day, they will nearly fly.
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Finally, we finished and the teacher said, you
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should be prepared, increase your effort a little
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bit. Okay, clap for her. Okay, look here, this is
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an example of creativity.
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But let me choose, yeah, you, you want like, this
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is randomly to make sure everybody's writing.
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Sometimes it's weird how time passed so fast. It
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was just like yesterday when Dr. Akram asked us to
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write a daily report, and I remember how confused
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I was. But now all my fears disappeared. Now I
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know how to write a daily report and how to write
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a response. It is unbelievable that we already
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finished two poems and about to start the third.
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I'm so excited to take a poem by Sir Philip Sidney
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because I've heard that he is a very talented boy.
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Good, thank you very much. And we have to clap for
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her as well. It doesn't mean that we don't like
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what Rawan said, but it's okay. Right. Today I
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thought it would be nice to go through two
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important elements, more specifically two more
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elements of poetry, the rhyme and the rhythm. And
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then later we might go back to part two of the
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critical plan. I think, you know, we have taken
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two poems. We spoke about rhyme in general. But
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today, I'll take you to be more specific to talk
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about rhyme. Because we have many types of rhyme.
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You might have read that.
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As you see here, there are many types of rhyme. We
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have perfect rhyme.No perfect rhyme. We have
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imperfect rhyme.
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Sorry.
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Perfect rhyme. Imperfect rhyme. Masculine rhyme.
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Feminine rhyme. I rhyme. Para rhyme. Okay, this is
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more specific. I think most of you, like those who
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read their reports, were writing poetic lines
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using perfect rhyme. Perfect rhyme, as you see,
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this is an example of perfect rhyme. It is like a
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rhyme which has almost the same sound, the same
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sound. Like this is in Spencer. help me to blaze
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her worthy praise. Like he was praising the queen,
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and like, you see, blaze and praise, almost the
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same sound. Okay? So we call this perfect rhyme.
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And another example, I saw Phobias thrust out his
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golden head upon her to gaze, but when he saw how
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broad her beams did spread, you know, so spread
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and hid. So this is perfect rhyme. Now we might
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ask when poets use perfect rhyme or when they use
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imperfect rhyme. Sometimes in certain poems, you
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should stick to perfect rhyme. However, poets
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might variate between perfect and imperfect
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according to their attitude, the atmosphere of the
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poem. Perhaps they want to criticize or they want
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to praise. So using the rhyme, each poet uses the
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rhyme that fits with the topic, the subject
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matter. We cannot now for sure say this rhyme
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serves this purpose. It is according to the poem.
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Sometimes you have perfect rhyme and suddenly the
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poet changes into imperfect rhyme. Like, you don't
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have this harmony, perhaps because there is no
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harmony in the experience of the poet. See what I
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mean? I remember in Wilfred Owen, Futility, he was
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using imperfect rhyme, he was using I rhyme. And
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why? Because he saw no pattern in life, so he did
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not want to commit himself to any pattern of
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poetry. So why would a poet use this rhyme? This
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depends on the poem itself. Okay, so I think these
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are again here in Epithelium. Epithelium is a poem
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written by Spencer to describe his, it is a
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matrimony poem. Matrimony, wedding. It was to
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describe his wedding. It is a beautiful one,
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Epithelium, if you have time to read it, you know,
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just go and read it. So, now we'll go to another
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type of rhyme, which is imperfect rhyme. You know,
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imperfect rhyme, you see, it is not, it doesn't
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have the same sound. Like you hear, you see, also
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in the same poem of Spencer, you have though
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hidden peril round about me placed, yet hope I
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will that when this storm is passed. So what do
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you think? Placed and passed. Placed and passed.
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They're not almost, yeah, there is something
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similar, but it is not a perfect rhyme. So this is
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what imperfect rhyme.
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Again, why would they use this? This depends on
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the poem, the theme of the poem itself. Then comes
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number three, masculine rhyme. It's very funny,
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huh? Masculine rhyme. There is a rhyme which is
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masculine. And masculine rhyme, like as you see
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here, this is, you know, from The Solitary Reaper,
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I think. The Solitary Reaper, Wordsworth. When he
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says, I listened motionless and still, and as I
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mounted up the hill, the music in my heart I bore,
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long after it was heard no more. Look here, still
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and hill, bore and more. If you look at the words,
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how many syllables do we have in this word? One
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syllable. So, when The rhyming words are
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monosyllabic, like this. This is called masculine
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rhyme. It's a masculine rhyme. It is one syllable.
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It's not more than one syllable. It seems like
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this is very tough, but this is an example of
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masculine rhyme. Of course, when we talk about
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masculine, we should talk about feminine because
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if we call this masculine, there should be
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feminine. But somebody might say, okay, masculine
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means tough and feminine means flexible and more
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lenient.
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Feminine rhyme is the opposite. Of course, these
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are your reader, you can follow them. They are in
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the pamphlet.
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Again, Wordsworth, as if her song, it's in the
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same. So he was, in that poem, variating between a
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masculine rhyme and feminine rhyme. And in fact,
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if you read The Slither Reaper, I was teaching The
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Slither Reaper in other courses, In that poem,
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Wordsworth, I don't know, it seems like he was
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challenging the conventions of the time, I mean
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the past convention. He was romantic, but in this
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poem, he was using neoclassical. He was using
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poetic diction. So he was variating with
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The diction itself with the images sometimes, some
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of the images like I behold her single, behold,
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this is very poetic. Then would anybody tell me
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what she's singing? So he was moving from formal.
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to informal, from poetic diction, and even the
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rhyme. He is in the same poem, he's variating in
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the rhyme. Why he was doing this, some critics say
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because he wanted to challenge, he wanted to
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ridicule those. So this depends on the poem. If
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you look here, as if her song could have no
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ending, I saw her singing at work, at her work,
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and over the sickle bending. So if you look at
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ending and bending, they are two syllables. They
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have almost the same sound and this rhyme called
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feminine rhyme.
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Then I rhyme. I rhyme.
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I rhyme, you know, very deceptive. You know, you
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look at them, like here, some never advanced
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adjustment of their own, but catch the spreading
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notion of the town. So if you look at them, they
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seem to have rhymed, but if you read them, yeah,
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they, you know, do not have the same sound.
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I think the final one is para rhyme. Para, it's
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not like, as you see, it's a rhyme in which you
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have the same consonants, but the inside vowels
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are different. So if you look at this, I seem that
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out of the bottle I escaped. Down some profound
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doltenal I long since scooped, then through grains
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which Titanic wars had grown, yet also the
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encumbered sleepers grown. So what do you see?
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Escaped and scooped. We have the same consonant,
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but different vowel. So para, it is not
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completely, you know? It is not complete. It is
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semi, semi, you know? Semi-rhyme, because it has
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similar consonants, but different vowels. And this
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is again, you know, called para-rhyme.
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Okay. The poems we are studying have rhyme, and
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each rhyme, for example, in the sonnet of Sir
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Thomas Wyatt, the rhyme was fitting the sonnet. He
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was governed by this sonnet. It was A, if you
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remember, B, B, A. A, B, B, A, C, D, C, D, and E,
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E. So he was governed, but we said like when he
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chose word like behind, you know, we had like that
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long vowel and it has to do with his suffering and
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agony. Okay? So in the sonnet, you are governed by
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certain rhyme, but you have the freedom to play
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Which words to choose? Which words to choose? But
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rhyme is very important. Sometimes we might have
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or we might have a good and a better understanding
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of the poem because of a rhyme thing. The rhyme,
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sometimes they employ it to express certain
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feelings. Again, in Wilfred Owen, when he was
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shocked, by the tragedies of the war. He didn't
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use the perfect rhyme, he used I rhyme, he used
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imperfect rhyme, paradigm. So there was no pattern
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in the poem. And he did that deliberately in order
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to correlate this
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with his horror, his experience of disappointment
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because of the horror of the war itself. So
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sometimes there is kind of, you know, the rhyme
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resonates with the meaning of the poem. Okay? Now,
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we'll go to the problematic area, which is the
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rhythm. And some of you are disturbed because of
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the rhythm. and they think this is too much for
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us. I'm not teaching you scansion or neither
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prosody in this course, but it's very important to
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know the meters. and to know certain feet and how
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they function. Because sometimes again, in certain
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poems, mainly in Shakespeare, he plays with rhythm
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in order to suit perhaps an attitude or to fit
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with a tone or the general atmosphere of the poem.
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We are going to see that in one or two of his
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sonnets. So let's see what is rhythm.
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If you remember at the beginning of the course, we
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spoke about rhythm when we defined poetry. And
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here, these are the feet in English poetry. As we
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said, Most of the English poetry, I mean 80-70
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percent of the English poetry is written in iambic
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pentameter. Iamb is like this, two syllables. As
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you see, repeat, the word repeat. What is the
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stress? Is it on the first or the second? Yes,
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it's the longer one. Repeat, repeat, repeat. So it
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is very long. We saw this also in Henry Howard's
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poem last time. And thus I see among these
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pleasant things. It was iambic pentameter. But
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forget about pentameter. Like this is iamb. Ayam,
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it's called Ayam. If you have, you know, this
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pattern in the poem, you know, like repeat, you
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know, meet, see, et cetera, you have, this is
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Ayam. Now, the opposite of it, it's called Troche
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or Troche. You know, one of them either. And it is
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like never. Huh? Never. Like, look here, never.
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Where is the stress? It's on the first one.
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Clever. Never. Huh? Better. Okay, these are, you
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know, this is a trochee. It's the opposite of?
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Yes. The anabast. Okay, the anabast.
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The anabast. is similar to the iambic, but you
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have... Sorry.
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Okay. I have to go back. The anabast
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is like too unstressed, and then stressed, like
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interrupt, corrupt. You see? I think you are
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studying stress with Dr. Walid, okay? So, and Dr.
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Khader like teaching you like this, so you can
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make use of them in understanding the rhyme. Okay,
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then you have something called dactyl. Dactyl as
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it's like crochet, but instead of stressed, you
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have stressed and too unstressed, like Washington,
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wasting. It's like, as you see, one stressed, two
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stressed. Then you have spondee. This is accented.
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You don't have, it is like two words or two
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stressed syllables together, heart rate, heart
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rate, you know? Then you have pyrrhic, you know,
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like it is too unstressed,
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like as in the top of the mountain, the morning,
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you know, in the top of, morning, like too
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unstressed, too unstressed. Now we say monometer,
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diameter, why? Because sometimes if we look at the
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line of pottery, we might find iambic repeated
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like this, never ever. So what should I say? This
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is iambic what? Iambic monometer or diameter?
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Diameter, because it has two. It has two. So we
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say diameter, trimeter, monometer,
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diameter,
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yes, pentameter. It is according to the
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repetition.
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So here you have one foot is called what?
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Monometer.
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Two foot, diameter. Three, sorry, two feet. Three
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feet, trimeter. Four feet, tetrameter. Five,
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pentameter. That's why we said pentameter. Most of
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English poetry is written in pentameter, which is
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very musical. Then hexameter, six feet. Then
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heptameter, seven feet. And I think here you have
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some example. Like this is an example, you know,
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of iambic pentameter.
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Can anybody read this? Like here, from furthest
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creature, we desire increase. that their beauties
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rose, but never die. Who can read it? From there,
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from fair creatures, we desire increase, that
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their beauties rose, but never die. See? Titam,
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titam. So try to read it according to them, from
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fair, From fairest creatures, we desire increase,
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that their beauties rose, but never die. So it is
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measured, very musical. As I told you, if we talk
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in iambic pentameter, we'll be funny. For example,
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please, when you come to my class, write your
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report. It's like this, you know, ti tam, ti tam,
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ti tam. So another example, this is, you know, a
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tetrameter.
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Tetrameter, sorry.
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This is iambic trimeter, three. It is the evening
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hour. How silent all that lie. It is the evening
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hour. How silent all that lie. See? This is iambic
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trimeter. Then we have tetrameter. This is like
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Troche. He's...
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I think it is in the other side.
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The iambic tetrameter, it's like, it's a poem we
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are going to study. Okay, just like.
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Is it clear? Okay.
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This is, you know, tricky, but I'm just like, I
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want to give you an example of iambic tetrameter.
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It's like in Marlowe's, they never reply, come
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live with me and be my love. It is, you know, Come
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live with me and be my love. It is eight
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syllables, and it is called iambic pentameter.
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This is troche tetrameter. Come, you know, troche,
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we said it's the opposite. Come my, what is the
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stress? The first one. Come my, Celia, let us
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prove why we made this sports of love. You know,
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it's like troche, and how many syllables do you
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have? You have like, you know, six here, as you
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see. Tetra, because we have six syllables.
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Tetrameter, like eight, in fact. Cum, cummi, this
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is two, cilia two, two, so we have eight. Eight
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syllables because the foot, each foot is like two
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syllables. So this is called troche, dactyl,
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tetrameter. Like this one, you know, women much
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missed how you call to me, call to me, saying that
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you are not as you were, okay? So this is, and all
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these are examples of the meters, just like look
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at them, you know, and see the stress, where the
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stress, so it is very important that to know In
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this course, we might look at the rhythm in some
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poems because sometimes the rhythm might have
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something to do with poetry. Good. This is
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generally about rhythm and rhyme and rhythm. We'll
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go back to the critical plan. Yes.
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No, I mean it is up to the purpose, like how he
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sees. Sometimes certain words, you know, do not
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fit with the rhyme. But poets want to be regular.
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Like I know some, you know, some students of mine,
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write poetry by using rhythm. They go study rhythm
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and they write poetry. Even they are not native
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speakers, but they still, a student of mine, even
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he's like Tawjihi, said, I wrote a poem in Anabas,
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which was very surprising to me. So yes, they
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choose sometimes like they vary it. Sometimes they
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are systematic. It is according to the purpose
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they want to establish. Yes, sir. Yes.
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Forty love middle-aged couple. Yes. Yes.
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It doesn't fit with the rhythm of that.
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Yeah, but no, 40 love, 40 love, you have two
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syllables. We have two syllables in each one. 40
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love, it's like iambic. All of it, it is iambic
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diameter. 40 love, middle-aged couple playing
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tennis, it's iambic pentameter.
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Yeah, that was, you know, I mean at the beginning
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of the course I gave you two poems which are
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modern. Sometimes some poets do not follow rhyme
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at all, and this is called free verse. They do not
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follow rhyme, and sometimes they vary it with
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rhythm. See? But those poems I gave you at the
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beginning of the course were just
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very modern or very postmodern, in which the poets
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did not commit themselves to the tradition of
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English poetry.
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If you remember last time, I gave you, quickly at
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the end of the lecture, the leveler. And part two
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of the critical plan was discussing some areas we,
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as readers, might face when we read a poem. And as
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you see, the first area was
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like, we don't have to be very hasty. Some people
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are hasty. This is part two. It's meaning,
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intention, and idea. And here, as you see, we are
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strongly advised
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These are areas gaining balanced development of
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the theme, maintaining the total experience of the
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poem, and judging the poem on the basis of the
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poet's intention.
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We said, you know, gaining a balanced development
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of the theme. We do not have to base our judgment
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on one part of the poem, we have to follow or to
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read the entire poem and to test this theme. Is it
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like, does it fit with the whole poem or not? So
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we don't have to be very hasty. And we gave you
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the example of Deliverer, which was similar to the
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example of the poem, Who's Lost to Hunt, if you
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remember. So this is an area we should be careful.
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Of course, we cannot say what is the poem about
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unless we read it several times. The second
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problem area like here, as you say, we have to
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maintain the total experience. Here, the second
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area is called the total meaning and the prose
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meaning. There is something called the prose
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meaning and the total meaning. What is the
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difference between the prose meaning and the total
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meaning? The prose meaning of the poem means the
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dictionary meaning. It is the paraphrase. So if
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you say spring,
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has bloom and everything is beautiful, you are
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paraphrasing. But when you link this description
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with experience, you are talking about the total
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experience. So the total experience is different
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from the prose meaning.
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This is the leveler we read last time. I wish you
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look at it again. It's a very interesting poem,
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and we saw how sarcastic the poet was.
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Mainly here in the last two stanzas, when he said,
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Old Sergeant Smith, kindness of man, wrote out two
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copies there and then of his accustomed speech to
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cheer the women folk of each. He died a hero's
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death, and here we saw how sarcastic the poet was,
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how cynical he was. He didn't believe in the idea
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of heroism. The second area, this is like, do not
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give hasty adjustment. This is the second problem.
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to understand the poet's thoughts and emotions.
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Now, yes, we have to understand the poet's
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thoughts and emotions. And in order to understand
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this, we have to be open. Now, sometimes we might
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not like or we might find a poem difficult. Some
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words are difficult and we say, damn, I'm not
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going to read this poem. This is not good. Okay?
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You have to be sympathetic. At least while you are
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reading the poem, you have to be, because you
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won't have access to the experience, to the total
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experience of the poet unless you are sympathetic.
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You have to understand. You have to live the
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experience of the poet in order to appreciate the
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poem. And as you see, sometimes we don't have to
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judge the poem according to our initial feeling.
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And we hear, be sure you go to the author to get
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his meaning, not to find yours. Sometimes we are
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blinded by a certain idea in our mind, and we keep
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developing this and forget what the poem is about.
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So I think this is something we have to be
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cautious of.
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As you see here, the meaning of the poem is the
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experience it expresses. It is the experience. So
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this is the meaning. What kind of experience? This
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is the experience of happiness, sadness,
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frustration. So this is the meaning of the poem.
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It is not the prose meaning of the poem. It is not
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the paraphrase of the poem. Okay, you just go read
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this part because sometimes we like We might be
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worried that the poem has no ideas. It discusses
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no ideas. And we say, why? Sometimes we have a
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poem which is meaningful because it is only a
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description. And this description records the
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experience. And if you see here, you have a poem,
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The Eagle. The eagle is an example. Here, it's a
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description of an eagle which goes up high and
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then comes down as a thunderbolt. Like, look here.
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This is the eagle. It's a description. He clasped
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the crag with crocked hands, close to the sun in
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lonely lands. Ringed with the azure word, he
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stands. The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls. He
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watches from his mountain walls. And like
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thunderbolt, he falls. It's a description of
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eagle.
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This poem was written by Tennyson. Tennyson was a
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Victorian poet. And in the Victorian time, the
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world was changing. people started to lose
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certainty about, you know, no social patterns like
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laissez-faire or, you know, like there was
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corruption, utilitarianism, you know, people, I
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mean, materialism was governing everything. So the
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sense of society, the social patterns, you know,
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vanished. And in fact, even like religion, I mean,
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religious values retreated and retreated and Here
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the poet, what is the experience of the poet
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exactly? He was looking, he looked at the eagle.
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The eagle had the power to go up to leave this
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land, to go and come down, while the poet himself
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was mentally, psychologically entrapped. So he was
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looking at this bird with some feeling of envy. He
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was trapped. But look at this. He clasped the crag
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with crooked hands. Look how he admires it. Close
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to the sun in lonely lands. Ringed with azure. He
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envies the freedom of this creature. The wrinkled
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sea beneath. Look at him, how powerful. Him
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crawls. He watches from his mountain walls. And
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like a thunderbolt, he falls. So here, okay, the
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description is wonderful. We might look at this
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for more aesthetic consideration, but as you see
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here, the experience of the poet was like he, he
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was not Like, he didn't have the ability to leave
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because psychologically, mentally, he was trapped.
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His age was like an age of corruption, or an age
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of materialism. So people felt they were trapped.
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They could not go nowhere. And here, he's just
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looking at this eagle who's having that ability to
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escape. To escape, not like the poet. I think, you
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know, today, this is enough for today. I'm giving
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chance to other classes to catch up. Next time, as
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I said, you have to bring, like, you know, your
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response to Sidney and Spencer. You know, Spencer
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to his, you know, there is a sonnet for Spencer.
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So, but we are going to discuss first Sydney and
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then Spencer, okay? Thank you very much.
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