|
1 |
|
00:00:13,660 --> 00:00:18,520 |
|
Assalamualaikum Good morning everybody How was the |
|
|
|
2 |
|
00:00:18,520 --> 00:00:26,280 |
|
weekend? Not okay? Are you excited like the |
|
|
|
3 |
|
00:00:26,280 --> 00:00:32,920 |
|
semester is over? Who's excited? I'm not excited, |
|
|
|
4 |
|
00:00:33,060 --> 00:00:36,960 |
|
you know, because I think, you know, you're good |
|
|
|
5 |
|
00:00:36,960 --> 00:00:40,660 |
|
students and I should continue. You're going to |
|
|
|
6 |
|
00:00:40,660 --> 00:00:44,100 |
|
miss this class someday. I read some reports and |
|
|
|
7 |
|
00:00:44,100 --> 00:00:49,440 |
|
like the students at the beginning, you know, were |
|
|
|
8 |
|
00:00:49,440 --> 00:00:52,160 |
|
saying, I don't know what, how we are going to |
|
|
|
9 |
|
00:00:52,160 --> 00:00:55,580 |
|
use, make use of this course. And then I looked at |
|
|
|
10 |
|
00:00:55,580 --> 00:00:59,220 |
|
their final report. I found them like praising and |
|
|
|
11 |
|
00:00:59,220 --> 00:01:01,720 |
|
they're going like, they felt very sad that the |
|
|
|
12 |
|
00:01:01,720 --> 00:01:04,540 |
|
course is over. But some students like wanted to |
|
|
|
13 |
|
00:01:04,540 --> 00:01:09,160 |
|
be over, you know. So this is the nature of a |
|
|
|
14 |
|
00:01:09,160 --> 00:01:13,000 |
|
human being. Yes, they want to graduate and we |
|
|
|
15 |
|
00:01:13,000 --> 00:01:16,040 |
|
understand their feelings. Good. Today is the last |
|
|
|
16 |
|
00:01:16,040 --> 00:01:18,360 |
|
class. It should be the last class. I'm not sure |
|
|
|
17 |
|
00:01:18,360 --> 00:01:21,760 |
|
how this class is going to proceed. But if we need |
|
|
|
18 |
|
00:01:21,760 --> 00:01:24,360 |
|
another class, I don't mind giving on Monday. |
|
|
|
19 |
|
00:01:27,700 --> 00:01:31,940 |
|
Today, as you see, we're going to conduct |
|
|
|
20 |
|
00:01:31,940 --> 00:01:33,740 |
|
stylistic analysis |
|
|
|
21 |
|
00:01:36,310 --> 00:01:39,090 |
|
Of course, there will be daily report. This is |
|
|
|
22 |
|
00:01:39,090 --> 00:01:41,590 |
|
after listening to report. So we're going to see |
|
|
|
23 |
|
00:01:41,590 --> 00:01:48,590 |
|
the choices created by, I mean here, we're going |
|
|
|
24 |
|
00:01:48,590 --> 00:01:53,030 |
|
to look at the poem and to see how the words which |
|
|
|
25 |
|
00:01:53,030 --> 00:01:56,630 |
|
were chosen, which were deleted here, and then |
|
|
|
26 |
|
00:01:56,630 --> 00:01:59,050 |
|
suggested |
|
|
|
27 |
|
00:02:01,500 --> 00:02:05,080 |
|
by us, and then like the words chosen by the poet, |
|
|
|
28 |
|
00:02:05,360 --> 00:02:08,180 |
|
how they create certain pattern, which pattern |
|
|
|
29 |
|
00:02:08,180 --> 00:02:11,820 |
|
they are creating, and what is the effect of that. |
|
|
|
30 |
|
00:02:12,700 --> 00:02:15,720 |
|
But before we start, yes, we are going to listen |
|
|
|
31 |
|
00:02:15,720 --> 00:02:17,420 |
|
to a report, yes? |
|
|
|
32 |
|
00:02:31,760 --> 00:02:34,920 |
|
Four months later, time goes so fast. I got my |
|
|
|
33 |
|
00:02:34,920 --> 00:02:37,520 |
|
memories and they will last. I try to keep it |
|
|
|
34 |
|
00:02:37,520 --> 00:02:40,360 |
|
simple because I hate goodbyes by telling myself |
|
|
|
35 |
|
00:02:40,360 --> 00:02:43,440 |
|
that I will remember this class. I remember all |
|
|
|
36 |
|
00:02:43,440 --> 00:02:45,860 |
|
the things I have gone through. There's so much I |
|
|
|
37 |
|
00:02:45,860 --> 00:02:50,460 |
|
can say, but words get in my way. From Wyatt to |
|
|
|
38 |
|
00:02:50,460 --> 00:02:53,580 |
|
Owen, it all seemed once as a never-ending line of |
|
|
|
39 |
|
00:02:53,580 --> 00:02:56,900 |
|
poems. So later on, when I'm sitting on my couch, |
|
|
|
40 |
|
00:02:57,120 --> 00:02:59,980 |
|
I'm recollecting my thoughts in tranquility, and |
|
|
|
41 |
|
00:02:59,980 --> 00:03:04,480 |
|
each class will flash in my memory. Or I'll go |
|
|
|
42 |
|
00:03:04,480 --> 00:03:07,080 |
|
with the easy way and just watch the videos. Thank |
|
|
|
43 |
|
00:03:07,080 --> 00:03:09,520 |
|
you very much. This is very interesting. Clap for |
|
|
|
44 |
|
00:03:09,520 --> 00:03:15,520 |
|
her, please. I like this. Good. Yes? |
|
|
|
45 |
|
00:03:20,100 --> 00:03:24,360 |
|
Good morning. December is the last month of this |
|
|
|
46 |
|
00:03:24,360 --> 00:03:24,740 |
|
semester. |
|
|
|
47 |
|
00:03:35,150 --> 00:03:39,670 |
|
Am I bus driver or train driver? Okay. It's good |
|
|
|
48 |
|
00:03:39,670 --> 00:03:42,530 |
|
to think of the teacher as a bus driver and the |
|
|
|
49 |
|
00:03:42,530 --> 00:03:46,390 |
|
students as passengers because this is metaphoric. |
|
|
|
50 |
|
00:03:47,120 --> 00:03:50,180 |
|
And I think, you know, if you don't give the |
|
|
|
51 |
|
00:03:50,180 --> 00:03:53,500 |
|
students orientation of where about you are going, |
|
|
|
52 |
|
00:03:53,860 --> 00:03:57,160 |
|
they're going to get, you know, astray, they are |
|
|
|
53 |
|
00:03:57,160 --> 00:04:03,060 |
|
going to get lost. The train crossed 40 |
|
|
|
54 |
|
00:04:03,060 --> 00:04:06,580 |
|
situations, all of them full of different |
|
|
|
55 |
|
00:04:06,580 --> 00:04:10,380 |
|
features. You mean stations, right? Stations. All |
|
|
|
56 |
|
00:04:10,380 --> 00:04:14,180 |
|
of them full of different features. But now the |
|
|
|
57 |
|
00:04:14,180 --> 00:04:17,060 |
|
train is stopping in the middle of war and there |
|
|
|
58 |
|
00:04:17,060 --> 00:04:21,560 |
|
are soldiers who fight and die for their country. |
|
|
|
59 |
|
00:04:22,060 --> 00:04:26,920 |
|
Also there are a sunshine but its beams cannot |
|
|
|
60 |
|
00:04:26,920 --> 00:04:30,560 |
|
able to recover the soldier wound. After this |
|
|
|
61 |
|
00:04:30,560 --> 00:04:35,020 |
|
station, the train will finish its trip and stop |
|
|
|
62 |
|
00:04:35,020 --> 00:04:39,020 |
|
and arrive to the examiner. Next, the passenger |
|
|
|
63 |
|
00:04:39,020 --> 00:04:41,250 |
|
will leave the train. Okay, thank you very much. |
|
|
|
64 |
|
00:04:41,670 --> 00:04:44,890 |
|
So I think this is like the quality of, this is |
|
|
|
65 |
|
00:04:44,890 --> 00:04:48,610 |
|
the importance of the report. It gives you a |
|
|
|
66 |
|
00:04:48,610 --> 00:04:51,930 |
|
chance to reflect, to talk to yourself. It gives |
|
|
|
67 |
|
00:04:51,930 --> 00:04:55,690 |
|
you a chance to develop a unique monologue. And |
|
|
|
68 |
|
00:04:55,690 --> 00:04:58,230 |
|
this is what happened. So my interest was not like |
|
|
|
69 |
|
00:04:58,230 --> 00:05:01,750 |
|
to record what was happening in the class |
|
|
|
70 |
|
00:05:01,750 --> 00:05:05,710 |
|
literally, but perhaps like to reflect, to debate |
|
|
|
71 |
|
00:05:05,710 --> 00:05:06,350 |
|
with yourself. |
|
|
|
72 |
|
00:05:09,180 --> 00:05:12,280 |
|
Good. I know like some people want to read the |
|
|
|
73 |
|
00:05:12,280 --> 00:05:15,020 |
|
reports. Is anybody dying to read her report? Yes. |
|
|
|
74 |
|
00:05:17,560 --> 00:05:19,120 |
|
She's dying to read her report. |
|
|
|
75 |
|
00:05:23,560 --> 00:05:28,080 |
|
Good morning, everybody. Since we reached the last |
|
|
|
76 |
|
00:05:28,080 --> 00:05:31,040 |
|
course of Pottery, actually I began to have some |
|
|
|
77 |
|
00:05:31,040 --> 00:05:34,040 |
|
feeling of grief and I began to feel sorry. For |
|
|
|
78 |
|
00:05:34,040 --> 00:05:36,620 |
|
the first time I liked Pottery course without any |
|
|
|
79 |
|
00:05:36,620 --> 00:05:39,380 |
|
compliment because we learned many things from |
|
|
|
80 |
|
00:05:39,380 --> 00:05:44,480 |
|
this course and we had a lot of enjoyment. When I |
|
|
|
81 |
|
00:05:44,480 --> 00:05:47,920 |
|
remember that we started to approach the end of |
|
|
|
82 |
|
00:05:47,920 --> 00:05:51,090 |
|
that course, My tears began to drop or to fall |
|
|
|
83 |
|
00:05:51,090 --> 00:05:54,950 |
|
down but without any result or cause. Actually, I |
|
|
|
84 |
|
00:05:54,950 --> 00:05:58,450 |
|
admired Putri lecture and I'm not saying that |
|
|
|
85 |
|
00:05:58,450 --> 00:06:01,870 |
|
because of standing here but because this is the |
|
|
|
86 |
|
00:06:01,870 --> 00:06:05,390 |
|
only course I admire and I have some feeling of |
|
|
|
87 |
|
00:06:05,390 --> 00:06:08,430 |
|
fear. And last but not least, I thank Mr. Habib |
|
|
|
88 |
|
00:06:08,430 --> 00:06:11,670 |
|
because of his continual efforts in order to make |
|
|
|
89 |
|
00:06:11,670 --> 00:06:15,610 |
|
us love this lecture and because he provided with |
|
|
|
90 |
|
00:06:15,610 --> 00:06:19,230 |
|
many useful information And because he gave us a |
|
|
|
91 |
|
00:06:19,230 --> 00:06:21,630 |
|
lot about this course, perfect and complete |
|
|
|
92 |
|
00:06:21,630 --> 00:06:26,410 |
|
lecture. So put your lecture and Mr. Habib, I |
|
|
|
93 |
|
00:06:26,410 --> 00:06:29,550 |
|
can't say goodbye because of the case of missing |
|
|
|
94 |
|
00:06:29,550 --> 00:06:33,070 |
|
you. And I'm saying that without being shy. So |
|
|
|
95 |
|
00:06:33,070 --> 00:06:35,050 |
|
thank you very much. But you know, this is a |
|
|
|
96 |
|
00:06:35,050 --> 00:06:36,870 |
|
valediction report. You know what valediction |
|
|
|
97 |
|
00:06:36,870 --> 00:06:42,250 |
|
means? Like farewell, you know? Verification |
|
|
|
98 |
|
00:06:42,250 --> 00:06:45,790 |
|
report. But again, like, I'm not sure whether they |
|
|
|
99 |
|
00:06:45,790 --> 00:06:48,410 |
|
are going, you know, everybody here is sharing you |
|
|
|
100 |
|
00:06:48,410 --> 00:06:53,210 |
|
because we have some different point of views and |
|
|
|
101 |
|
00:06:53,210 --> 00:06:55,410 |
|
I'm interested in those different point of views. |
|
|
|
102 |
|
00:06:55,710 --> 00:06:57,690 |
|
You know, if you want to have a different point of |
|
|
|
103 |
|
00:06:57,690 --> 00:07:01,760 |
|
view, you can come. Or you can, like, let me know |
|
|
|
104 |
|
00:07:01,760 --> 00:07:05,440 |
|
because also I'm interested in those who do not |
|
|
|
105 |
|
00:07:05,440 --> 00:07:08,380 |
|
like the course. You know, this is your right to |
|
|
|
106 |
|
00:07:08,380 --> 00:07:12,400 |
|
like or not to like, you know? And I still |
|
|
|
107 |
|
00:07:12,400 --> 00:07:15,160 |
|
remember many people who started not liking the |
|
|
|
108 |
|
00:07:15,160 --> 00:07:19,660 |
|
course. Then when they told me about this, I made |
|
|
|
109 |
|
00:07:19,660 --> 00:07:22,480 |
|
them like the course. You see what I mean? So if |
|
|
|
110 |
|
00:07:22,480 --> 00:07:24,740 |
|
you have some reservation, you can approach me |
|
|
|
111 |
|
00:07:24,740 --> 00:07:28,470 |
|
even after the course. Good, today, as you see, |
|
|
|
112 |
|
00:07:29,070 --> 00:07:34,850 |
|
we're going to see again Wilfred Owen's utility. |
|
|
|
113 |
|
00:07:36,010 --> 00:07:40,830 |
|
Last time we generally discussed, if you remember, |
|
|
|
114 |
|
00:07:41,830 --> 00:07:45,490 |
|
the possibility of the soldier in the war, was he |
|
|
|
115 |
|
00:07:45,490 --> 00:07:50,270 |
|
dead or not, we paraphrased the poem. Today, we're |
|
|
|
116 |
|
00:07:50,270 --> 00:07:54,830 |
|
going to see the choices here. |
|
|
|
117 |
|
00:07:58,120 --> 00:08:03,000 |
|
and to see how the poet's choice perhaps makes |
|
|
|
118 |
|
00:08:03,000 --> 00:08:07,360 |
|
pattern because when we write a word, we should |
|
|
|
119 |
|
00:08:07,360 --> 00:08:11,560 |
|
link this word with another word in the poem. So |
|
|
|
120 |
|
00:08:11,560 --> 00:08:16,220 |
|
if we succeed, it means like we have certain |
|
|
|
121 |
|
00:08:16,220 --> 00:08:20,840 |
|
patterns created and this is good for poetry. So |
|
|
|
122 |
|
00:08:20,840 --> 00:08:25,920 |
|
now, move him into the sun. Like for this stanza, |
|
|
|
123 |
|
00:08:26,580 --> 00:08:31,660 |
|
I'm going to read for you some choices, you can |
|
|
|
124 |
|
00:08:31,660 --> 00:08:33,440 |
|
write them. Early, |
|
|
|
125 |
|
00:08:36,400 --> 00:08:44,460 |
|
shade, the word early, the word shade, the word |
|
|
|
126 |
|
00:08:44,460 --> 00:08:52,180 |
|
revive, the word old, Yes. |
|
|
|
127 |
|
00:08:55,260 --> 00:09:02,320 |
|
The word restore. The word sun. The word mourning. |
|
|
|
128 |
|
00:09:04,480 --> 00:09:05,860 |
|
The word grave. |
|
|
|
129 |
|
00:09:08,340 --> 00:09:12,420 |
|
The word kind. Rouse. |
|
|
|
130 |
|
00:09:14,600 --> 00:09:16,280 |
|
Bright. Hospital. |
|
|
|
131 |
|
00:09:19,440 --> 00:09:26,730 |
|
Okay. Now, move him into the sun. Yes, that was. |
|
|
|
132 |
|
00:09:27,810 --> 00:09:32,130 |
|
Now, can you substitute this by another like word, |
|
|
|
133 |
|
00:09:32,390 --> 00:09:35,690 |
|
the words I gave you, you know, the word I've just |
|
|
|
134 |
|
00:09:35,690 --> 00:09:41,530 |
|
given you? Yeah, move him into hospital. Move him |
|
|
|
135 |
|
00:09:41,530 --> 00:09:44,350 |
|
into the hospital. Do you think this is a good |
|
|
|
136 |
|
00:09:44,350 --> 00:09:44,750 |
|
choice? |
|
|
|
137 |
|
00:09:50,640 --> 00:09:55,740 |
|
Yeah, but like, do you think, let's see the |
|
|
|
138 |
|
00:09:55,740 --> 00:09:56,100 |
|
hospital. |
|
|
|
139 |
|
00:09:59,680 --> 00:10:05,680 |
|
So you think |
|
|
|
140 |
|
00:10:05,680 --> 00:10:09,060 |
|
hospital is a good choice? Grave is a good choice? |
|
|
|
141 |
|
00:10:09,260 --> 00:10:12,000 |
|
Because he's dead? But I don't think, you know, |
|
|
|
142 |
|
00:10:12,640 --> 00:10:17,960 |
|
this perhaps is a good choice. Why? Because here, |
|
|
|
143 |
|
00:10:18,840 --> 00:10:26,060 |
|
it seems like there was uncertainty about the |
|
|
|
144 |
|
00:10:26,060 --> 00:10:30,820 |
|
soldiers being, you see, and again, this is a |
|
|
|
145 |
|
00:10:30,820 --> 00:10:36,520 |
|
battlefield, and it is unlikely for a soldier, you |
|
|
|
146 |
|
00:10:36,520 --> 00:10:41,500 |
|
know, to have like a funeral, to have the funeral |
|
|
|
147 |
|
00:10:41,500 --> 00:10:46,250 |
|
procession in the battlefield. Soldiers who die in |
|
|
|
148 |
|
00:10:46,250 --> 00:10:51,510 |
|
the battlefield are not given burial soon. They're |
|
|
|
149 |
|
00:10:51,510 --> 00:10:59,550 |
|
not buried soon. Grave, hospital? Again, the word |
|
|
|
150 |
|
00:10:59,550 --> 00:11:03,730 |
|
hospital is not possible. Now the choice, the word |
|
|
|
151 |
|
00:11:03,730 --> 00:11:08,970 |
|
son. Do you think it makes pattern with any of |
|
|
|
152 |
|
00:11:08,970 --> 00:11:10,770 |
|
these words? Son. |
|
|
|
153 |
|
00:11:13,630 --> 00:11:18,850 |
|
Is it a good choice? This is what the poet used. |
|
|
|
154 |
|
00:11:19,190 --> 00:11:24,630 |
|
Why? What does it make pattern with? Where can we |
|
|
|
155 |
|
00:11:24,630 --> 00:11:27,850 |
|
link the word with? Yes, please. Okay, in terms of |
|
|
|
156 |
|
00:11:27,850 --> 00:11:30,150 |
|
the meaning, you can look at the fourth line, |
|
|
|
157 |
|
00:11:30,310 --> 00:11:33,650 |
|
always it awoke him. This is something like the |
|
|
|
158 |
|
00:11:33,650 --> 00:11:36,730 |
|
sun, this is the sun's doing. And also you can see |
|
|
|
159 |
|
00:11:36,730 --> 00:11:40,510 |
|
it when it comes to the poetic aspect, you can see |
|
|
|
160 |
|
00:11:40,510 --> 00:11:45,590 |
|
it rhyming sort of with Anson It is imperfect. |
|
|
|
161 |
|
00:11:45,770 --> 00:11:48,270 |
|
Good, thank you very much. So I think, you know, |
|
|
|
162 |
|
00:11:49,190 --> 00:11:54,830 |
|
the choice sun is a good choice. Why? Because, you |
|
|
|
163 |
|
00:11:54,830 --> 00:11:57,550 |
|
know, here the first stanza, it ends with the sun |
|
|
|
164 |
|
00:11:57,550 --> 00:12:02,170 |
|
and it, sorry, it begins with the sun and ends |
|
|
|
165 |
|
00:12:02,170 --> 00:12:06,610 |
|
with the sun. So if anything might rouse him, you |
|
|
|
166 |
|
00:12:06,610 --> 00:12:09,650 |
|
know, here, the sun will know. So it makes |
|
|
|
167 |
|
00:12:09,650 --> 00:12:12,890 |
|
pattern. Well, you know, it begins with the sun |
|
|
|
168 |
|
00:12:12,890 --> 00:12:16,690 |
|
and ends with the sun. Yes, you're right. It is |
|
|
|
169 |
|
00:12:16,690 --> 00:12:21,570 |
|
like here, always it woke him once because we know |
|
|
|
170 |
|
00:12:21,570 --> 00:12:25,570 |
|
that the sun is linked with the act of awakening. |
|
|
|
171 |
|
00:12:28,270 --> 00:12:34,470 |
|
But here, again, the act of awakening. Is the |
|
|
|
172 |
|
00:12:34,470 --> 00:12:38,030 |
|
soldier like dead or alive? Is he awake or asleep? |
|
|
|
173 |
|
00:12:39,580 --> 00:12:43,400 |
|
Because here in the poem, the idea of awakening is |
|
|
|
174 |
|
00:12:43,400 --> 00:12:51,800 |
|
there, but it is cancelled by the sense of death |
|
|
|
175 |
|
00:12:51,800 --> 00:12:55,120 |
|
and sleep because it is cancelled by the |
|
|
|
176 |
|
00:12:55,120 --> 00:12:59,820 |
|
possibility of death. So when we have awakening |
|
|
|
177 |
|
00:12:59,820 --> 00:13:05,120 |
|
which is cancelled by death, sometimes when we |
|
|
|
178 |
|
00:13:05,120 --> 00:13:07,240 |
|
expect something would happen and it doesn't |
|
|
|
179 |
|
00:13:07,240 --> 00:13:11,480 |
|
happen, how do we feel? We feel disappointed. We |
|
|
|
180 |
|
00:13:11,480 --> 00:13:16,020 |
|
feel frustrated. We feel frustrated. So usually |
|
|
|
181 |
|
00:13:16,020 --> 00:13:21,260 |
|
this is like the effect of the defeat of |
|
|
|
182 |
|
00:13:21,260 --> 00:13:24,440 |
|
expectation. When our expectations are defeated, |
|
|
|
183 |
|
00:13:25,260 --> 00:13:28,880 |
|
when we expect that something would happen and it |
|
|
|
184 |
|
00:13:28,880 --> 00:13:34,660 |
|
doesn't happen, we are disappointed. And we feel |
|
|
|
185 |
|
00:13:34,660 --> 00:13:41,290 |
|
that a life sometimes or things All our waiting or |
|
|
|
186 |
|
00:13:41,290 --> 00:13:46,270 |
|
all our expectation has been futile. You see what |
|
|
|
187 |
|
00:13:46,270 --> 00:13:51,210 |
|
I mean? Concentrate on this word, futile. Good. |
|
|
|
188 |
|
00:13:51,790 --> 00:13:59,630 |
|
Yes, again, you said sun and sun. You said |
|
|
|
189 |
|
00:13:59,630 --> 00:14:04,230 |
|
imperfect rhyme. Like, what would happen if the |
|
|
|
190 |
|
00:14:04,230 --> 00:14:09,720 |
|
rhyme is perfect? because the uncertainty is given |
|
|
|
191 |
|
00:14:09,720 --> 00:14:12,940 |
|
by the imperfection of the rhyme. Like you don't |
|
|
|
192 |
|
00:14:12,940 --> 00:14:14,940 |
|
know there's something wrong going on. You don't |
|
|
|
193 |
|
00:14:14,940 --> 00:14:19,520 |
|
know if he's probably alive or he's just asleep. |
|
|
|
194 |
|
00:14:20,120 --> 00:14:25,900 |
|
So you mean like the perfect rhyme has to do with |
|
|
|
195 |
|
00:14:25,900 --> 00:14:33,080 |
|
sense of certainty. It has affirmative impact on |
|
|
|
196 |
|
00:14:33,080 --> 00:14:38,170 |
|
us. It has positive, but here it seems like You |
|
|
|
197 |
|
00:14:38,170 --> 00:14:42,510 |
|
know, the writer's attitude has nothing to do with |
|
|
|
198 |
|
00:14:42,510 --> 00:14:49,670 |
|
any sense of agreement or musicality at all. We'll |
|
|
|
199 |
|
00:14:49,670 --> 00:14:53,270 |
|
discuss the rhyme there, you know. Good. Move him |
|
|
|
200 |
|
00:14:53,270 --> 00:14:57,210 |
|
into the sun. Gently its touch awoke him once. |
|
|
|
201 |
|
00:14:59,830 --> 00:15:04,540 |
|
At home whispering of fields and so on. always it |
|
|
|
202 |
|
00:15:04,540 --> 00:15:08,400 |
|
woke him even in France until this morning and |
|
|
|
203 |
|
00:15:08,400 --> 00:15:12,260 |
|
this snow. Like if you remember in the previous |
|
|
|
204 |
|
00:15:12,260 --> 00:15:16,540 |
|
class we discussed that it's good I see new faces |
|
|
|
205 |
|
00:15:16,540 --> 00:15:20,020 |
|
today, you know? Faces I have never seen before. |
|
|
|
206 |
|
00:15:23,180 --> 00:15:25,460 |
|
Okay, I'm talking about the sun. |
|
|
|
207 |
|
00:15:30,740 --> 00:15:35,600 |
|
You see, if you remember, last time we said the |
|
|
|
208 |
|
00:15:35,600 --> 00:15:41,440 |
|
sun is introduced as animate and inanimate at the |
|
|
|
209 |
|
00:15:41,440 --> 00:15:47,620 |
|
same time. How? Because the |
|
|
|
210 |
|
00:15:47,620 --> 00:15:53,800 |
|
sun in the grammatical code is what? Animate or |
|
|
|
211 |
|
00:15:53,800 --> 00:15:57,540 |
|
inanimate? Yes, inanimate. But in the poem, in the |
|
|
|
212 |
|
00:15:57,540 --> 00:16:01,840 |
|
context of the poem, It is animate. So here |
|
|
|
213 |
|
00:16:01,840 --> 00:16:06,220 |
|
figuratively, it is animate, but grammatically, |
|
|
|
214 |
|
00:16:06,740 --> 00:16:09,320 |
|
you know, in the language goal, it is inanimate. |
|
|
|
215 |
|
00:16:09,700 --> 00:16:15,700 |
|
So what do we have here? We have a kind of tension |
|
|
|
216 |
|
00:16:15,700 --> 00:16:21,640 |
|
between animate and inanimate, between life and |
|
|
|
217 |
|
00:16:21,640 --> 00:16:27,160 |
|
death. So these contrasts are created animate, |
|
|
|
218 |
|
00:16:28,140 --> 00:16:32,670 |
|
inanimate, And what else? Life and death. What |
|
|
|
219 |
|
00:16:32,670 --> 00:16:45,630 |
|
else? Sun? Sun and? Sun and? Huh? Sun and? No? We |
|
|
|
220 |
|
00:16:45,630 --> 00:16:51,110 |
|
don't have the moon. The star? Okay. Yeah, the |
|
|
|
221 |
|
00:16:51,110 --> 00:16:55,730 |
|
sun. If you don't look at the snow. So again, we |
|
|
|
222 |
|
00:16:55,730 --> 00:16:58,390 |
|
have You know, pattern of contrast between |
|
|
|
223 |
|
00:16:58,390 --> 00:17:05,730 |
|
coldness and warmth. See what I mean? So these are |
|
|
|
224 |
|
00:17:05,730 --> 00:17:12,090 |
|
intention, and nothing is settled. Okay, if |
|
|
|
225 |
|
00:17:12,090 --> 00:17:21,150 |
|
anything might, if anything might, okay, we have |
|
|
|
226 |
|
00:17:21,150 --> 00:17:24,450 |
|
choices I give you. Like, what about restore? |
|
|
|
227 |
|
00:17:26,330 --> 00:17:31,450 |
|
Restore is a good choice. You know, I gave you a |
|
|
|
228 |
|
00:17:31,450 --> 00:17:35,170 |
|
word restore. What about the word restore? It's a |
|
|
|
229 |
|
00:17:35,170 --> 00:17:38,470 |
|
good choice, isn't it? Which is a better choice? |
|
|
|
230 |
|
00:17:38,790 --> 00:17:44,090 |
|
Restore or Rouse? Or revive? I like revive. You |
|
|
|
231 |
|
00:17:44,090 --> 00:17:48,850 |
|
like revive. Why? It's sort of like giving life |
|
|
|
232 |
|
00:17:48,850 --> 00:17:51,750 |
|
into something. Yes. Yeah. |
|
|
|
233 |
|
00:17:59,690 --> 00:18:05,430 |
|
Why revive is a good choice? You like it? Does it |
|
|
|
234 |
|
00:18:05,430 --> 00:18:07,210 |
|
make any pattern with revive? |
|
|
|
235 |
|
00:18:14,830 --> 00:18:18,030 |
|
You know, but I think the word Rouse, the word |
|
|
|
236 |
|
00:18:18,030 --> 00:18:22,310 |
|
Rouse has to do with awakening, you know? More |
|
|
|
237 |
|
00:18:22,310 --> 00:18:25,290 |
|
than with revive. Revive, it has to do with |
|
|
|
238 |
|
00:18:25,290 --> 00:18:30,310 |
|
somebody who's fainted and you revive him. You see |
|
|
|
239 |
|
00:18:30,310 --> 00:18:36,770 |
|
what I mean? Yes. And again, Rouse, does it make |
|
|
|
240 |
|
00:18:36,770 --> 00:18:44,800 |
|
any rhyme with, you know? Rouse. Now. You see? |
|
|
|
241 |
|
00:18:49,180 --> 00:18:54,440 |
|
Don't you think it has assonance? Not like revive. |
|
|
|
242 |
|
00:18:55,080 --> 00:18:58,000 |
|
There is assonance. It makes some assonance. And |
|
|
|
243 |
|
00:18:58,000 --> 00:19:00,360 |
|
this assonance has to do with complaint. |
|
|
|
244 |
|
00:19:03,580 --> 00:19:08,780 |
|
Okay, then the son will know. The early son. |
|
|
|
245 |
|
00:19:12,760 --> 00:19:15,320 |
|
The early, what about the early sun? Or the |
|
|
|
246 |
|
00:19:15,320 --> 00:19:15,820 |
|
morning sun? |
|
|
|
247 |
|
00:19:19,320 --> 00:19:23,680 |
|
Do you think the early sun is a good choice? The |
|
|
|
248 |
|
00:19:23,680 --> 00:19:27,100 |
|
bright sun? Yeah. |
|
|
|
249 |
|
00:19:30,600 --> 00:19:34,640 |
|
Yeah, so you think, you know here, because it |
|
|
|
250 |
|
00:19:34,640 --> 00:19:39,340 |
|
seems like to us, like the soldier is dead and the |
|
|
|
251 |
|
00:19:39,340 --> 00:19:44,460 |
|
poet is sarcastic. So the bright sun, I think the |
|
|
|
252 |
|
00:19:44,460 --> 00:19:46,560 |
|
bright sun might be also sarcastic. |
|
|
|
253 |
|
00:19:49,580 --> 00:19:52,000 |
|
The bright sun, the bright, |
|
|
|
254 |
|
00:19:55,360 --> 00:20:05,700 |
|
you know. The old, ah, old with no old. And old |
|
|
|
255 |
|
00:20:05,700 --> 00:20:10,180 |
|
has to do with the sense of weakness, inability. |
|
|
|
256 |
|
00:20:12,720 --> 00:20:15,640 |
|
The meter, what do you mean the meter? The kind |
|
|
|
257 |
|
00:20:15,640 --> 00:20:18,200 |
|
old sun will know, or the bright sun will know. |
|
|
|
258 |
|
00:20:18,360 --> 00:20:22,980 |
|
It's like, it's a less, like one feet element. |
|
|
|
259 |
|
00:20:23,920 --> 00:20:26,340 |
|
Less syllable, you mean? The syllable itself. |
|
|
|
260 |
|
00:20:26,660 --> 00:20:29,980 |
|
Yeah, two syllables or one syllable. Yeah, think |
|
|
|
261 |
|
00:20:29,980 --> 00:20:39,820 |
|
how it wakes the seeds. Sorry, I say the old kind. |
|
|
|
262 |
|
00:20:40,620 --> 00:20:44,270 |
|
If we say the bright kind, It doesn't make the |
|
|
|
263 |
|
00:20:44,270 --> 00:20:52,190 |
|
irony. But the old kind, antithesis, you know, how |
|
|
|
264 |
|
00:20:52,190 --> 00:20:55,570 |
|
come you are old? Because old has to do with the |
|
|
|
265 |
|
00:20:55,570 --> 00:21:00,330 |
|
sense of ineffectiveness, the sense of inability, |
|
|
|
266 |
|
00:21:00,850 --> 00:21:08,110 |
|
and the sense of futility as well. Because if the |
|
|
|
267 |
|
00:21:08,110 --> 00:21:14,430 |
|
sun is unable to rouse, to awake, we feel there is |
|
|
|
268 |
|
00:21:14,430 --> 00:21:19,510 |
|
nothing in the world. We feel there is a sense of |
|
|
|
269 |
|
00:21:19,510 --> 00:21:23,790 |
|
futility. And all of this makes pattern with the |
|
|
|
270 |
|
00:21:23,790 --> 00:21:28,970 |
|
title of the poem, Futility. Okay, let's see the |
|
|
|
271 |
|
00:21:28,970 --> 00:21:29,710 |
|
second stanza. |
|
|
|
272 |
|
00:21:34,030 --> 00:21:41,210 |
|
It starts with think. How does like move in the |
|
|
|
273 |
|
00:21:41,210 --> 00:21:45,710 |
|
first stanza differ from thinking? |
|
|
|
274 |
|
00:21:48,830 --> 00:21:55,090 |
|
Move, move him into the sun. It's like an order. |
|
|
|
275 |
|
00:21:56,410 --> 00:22:00,210 |
|
It seems like the poet is indignant, is very |
|
|
|
276 |
|
00:22:00,210 --> 00:22:07,450 |
|
angry. But now, once, You know, the poet made sure |
|
|
|
277 |
|
00:22:07,450 --> 00:22:12,750 |
|
that the soldier was dead. He's no longer angry, |
|
|
|
278 |
|
00:22:12,870 --> 00:22:18,790 |
|
but rather he's inviting us to meditate, to think. |
|
|
|
279 |
|
00:22:19,350 --> 00:22:25,450 |
|
Think. Think with me. How? So he is in the mood of |
|
|
|
280 |
|
00:22:25,450 --> 00:22:32,420 |
|
meditating. You know, like what? Think how it once |
|
|
|
281 |
|
00:22:32,420 --> 00:22:38,040 |
|
wakes the seeds, how the sun wakes the seed. So |
|
|
|
282 |
|
00:22:38,040 --> 00:22:44,080 |
|
he's inviting us to think about what? About |
|
|
|
283 |
|
00:22:44,080 --> 00:22:49,040 |
|
ourselves? About what? About the sun doing what? |
|
|
|
284 |
|
00:22:50,600 --> 00:22:55,220 |
|
Waking, how it was giving life. So now he started |
|
|
|
285 |
|
00:22:55,220 --> 00:23:01,220 |
|
to ask questions about Life. Life. Think how it |
|
|
|
286 |
|
00:23:01,220 --> 00:23:05,240 |
|
wakes the seeds once they glaze on a cold star. |
|
|
|
287 |
|
00:23:08,440 --> 00:23:11,360 |
|
We say here, what? |
|
|
|
288 |
|
00:23:14,100 --> 00:23:23,440 |
|
Move, or stare, or walk. What about move? Think |
|
|
|
289 |
|
00:23:23,440 --> 00:23:24,340 |
|
how the sun moves? |
|
|
|
290 |
|
00:23:26,990 --> 00:23:30,170 |
|
Yeah, we have redundancy. So I think, you know |
|
|
|
291 |
|
00:23:30,170 --> 00:23:36,510 |
|
here, woke, because again, it makes pattern with |
|
|
|
292 |
|
00:23:36,510 --> 00:23:42,090 |
|
waking, you know, the sense of waking. Because |
|
|
|
293 |
|
00:23:42,090 --> 00:23:48,910 |
|
here, as we said, waking is an issue. Is he awake |
|
|
|
294 |
|
00:23:48,910 --> 00:23:53,390 |
|
or is he asleep? Woke, the clays of a cold star. |
|
|
|
295 |
|
00:23:53,490 --> 00:23:58,950 |
|
This is like a nice metaphor. And we're talking |
|
|
|
296 |
|
00:23:58,950 --> 00:24:03,310 |
|
about the clays of a cold star. What is it a |
|
|
|
297 |
|
00:24:03,310 --> 00:24:07,530 |
|
metaphor of? This is like a metonymy. What is the |
|
|
|
298 |
|
00:24:07,530 --> 00:24:13,890 |
|
cold star? It is the earth. So here he is inviting |
|
|
|
299 |
|
00:24:13,890 --> 00:24:19,690 |
|
us to question the meaning of what? Of life on |
|
|
|
300 |
|
00:24:19,690 --> 00:24:25,570 |
|
earth. So the death of a soldier made him question |
|
|
|
301 |
|
00:24:25,570 --> 00:24:32,270 |
|
the meaning of life in general, of cosmic life, |
|
|
|
302 |
|
00:24:32,570 --> 00:24:37,950 |
|
how it started. Think how it once worked, once the |
|
|
|
303 |
|
00:24:37,950 --> 00:24:43,270 |
|
clays of a cold star. And then our limbs so dear |
|
|
|
304 |
|
00:24:43,270 --> 00:24:50,070 |
|
achieved our sides full-nerved, still warm, too |
|
|
|
305 |
|
00:24:50,070 --> 00:24:54,170 |
|
hard to stir. |
|
|
|
306 |
|
00:24:56,520 --> 00:24:59,340 |
|
Do you think star is a good choice? |
|
|
|
307 |
|
00:25:01,700 --> 00:25:08,520 |
|
Why a good choice? Because it makes imperfect |
|
|
|
308 |
|
00:25:08,520 --> 00:25:13,580 |
|
rhyme with star. So here, as I told you, there is |
|
|
|
309 |
|
00:25:13,580 --> 00:25:17,360 |
|
nothing perfect. So choosing the imperfect rhyme |
|
|
|
310 |
|
00:25:17,360 --> 00:25:25,850 |
|
has to create a sense of futility. Because here |
|
|
|
311 |
|
00:25:25,850 --> 00:25:28,810 |
|
we're not dealing with, you know, perfect tribe. |
|
|
|
312 |
|
00:25:30,030 --> 00:25:39,970 |
|
Was it for this? The what? Was it for this? The |
|
|
|
313 |
|
00:25:39,970 --> 00:25:41,350 |
|
soldier? |
|
|
|
314 |
|
00:25:43,110 --> 00:25:44,610 |
|
The clay? Why the clay? |
|
|
|
315 |
|
00:25:47,770 --> 00:25:54,340 |
|
It's a metonymy of what? What is he? Yeah, because |
|
|
|
316 |
|
00:25:54,340 --> 00:25:57,720 |
|
he's linking this soldier, the death of this |
|
|
|
317 |
|
00:25:57,720 --> 00:26:03,160 |
|
soldier, you know, or the life of this soldier to |
|
|
|
318 |
|
00:26:03,160 --> 00:26:07,040 |
|
the life of the universe. And the death of this |
|
|
|
319 |
|
00:26:07,040 --> 00:26:09,820 |
|
soldier to the death of the whole universe. Was it |
|
|
|
320 |
|
00:26:09,820 --> 00:26:18,660 |
|
for this? The clay grew tall. Was it for this? Are |
|
|
|
321 |
|
00:26:18,660 --> 00:26:24,250 |
|
we Created to die like this? This is what he is |
|
|
|
322 |
|
00:26:24,250 --> 00:26:34,810 |
|
asking. Or what made, what made futile? |
|
|
|
323 |
|
00:26:36,990 --> 00:26:39,290 |
|
I think this is very important because it is the |
|
|
|
324 |
|
00:26:39,290 --> 00:26:43,550 |
|
only, what made futile? |
|
|
|
325 |
|
00:26:45,830 --> 00:26:51,970 |
|
Friendly? Sunbeams? Is it friendly sunbeams? No. |
|
|
|
326 |
|
00:26:52,890 --> 00:26:57,690 |
|
Friendly is good, I think. Why not? Because it |
|
|
|
327 |
|
00:26:57,690 --> 00:27:01,670 |
|
doesn't go with the context. So here the poet |
|
|
|
328 |
|
00:27:01,670 --> 00:27:09,690 |
|
chose what? Fatuous. It is the only word which |
|
|
|
329 |
|
00:27:09,690 --> 00:27:14,960 |
|
deviates from all the words in the poem. Because |
|
|
|
330 |
|
00:27:14,960 --> 00:27:17,860 |
|
this is most of the words in the poem or all of |
|
|
|
331 |
|
00:27:17,860 --> 00:27:21,340 |
|
the words are monosyllabic. And this is the word |
|
|
|
332 |
|
00:27:21,340 --> 00:27:25,560 |
|
fatuous, fatuous. It is like three or four |
|
|
|
333 |
|
00:27:25,560 --> 00:27:29,220 |
|
syllables, fatuous. And we kept, what is fatuous? |
|
|
|
334 |
|
00:27:31,800 --> 00:27:35,680 |
|
So this is like here, he's inviting us. And I |
|
|
|
335 |
|
00:27:35,680 --> 00:27:39,520 |
|
think the only pattern it patterns with is the |
|
|
|
336 |
|
00:27:39,520 --> 00:27:41,600 |
|
title itself, fatuous. |
|
|
|
337 |
|
00:27:44,450 --> 00:27:48,550 |
|
to break Earth's sleep at all. So this is a |
|
|
|
338 |
|
00:27:48,550 --> 00:27:51,310 |
|
rhetorical question. He's asking about the meaning |
|
|
|
339 |
|
00:27:51,310 --> 00:27:56,010 |
|
of life from the very beginning. Life on Earth. |
|
|
|
340 |
|
00:27:56,270 --> 00:27:59,290 |
|
What is the meaning of this life? Why? You know, |
|
|
|
341 |
|
00:27:59,710 --> 00:28:03,410 |
|
what made fatuous sunbeams? Like here, the sun |
|
|
|
342 |
|
00:28:03,410 --> 00:28:09,210 |
|
which woke the seeds was fatuous. Why? Because you |
|
|
|
343 |
|
00:28:09,210 --> 00:28:13,030 |
|
work very hard to revive, to give life, and then |
|
|
|
344 |
|
00:28:13,890 --> 00:28:14,750 |
|
People are dead. |
|
|
|
345 |
|
00:28:18,370 --> 00:28:22,450 |
|
I relied on you to read the commentary at the end |
|
|
|
346 |
|
00:28:22,450 --> 00:28:24,810 |
|
of the stylistic analysis, and I want to share it |
|
|
|
347 |
|
00:28:24,810 --> 00:28:28,010 |
|
with you quickly. Commentary A, commentary B, |
|
|
|
348 |
|
00:28:28,530 --> 00:28:33,790 |
|
commentary C. Perhaps, you know, the many |
|
|
|
349 |
|
00:28:33,790 --> 00:28:38,570 |
|
references to awakening in the poem are poignantly |
|
|
|
350 |
|
00:28:38,570 --> 00:28:45,240 |
|
ironic. It's page 110. It's in the appendices. |
|
|
|
351 |
|
00:28:46,980 --> 00:28:51,160 |
|
Just as we know that it will do no good to move |
|
|
|
352 |
|
00:28:51,160 --> 00:28:55,080 |
|
the soldier, so we realize that he cannot be |
|
|
|
353 |
|
00:28:55,080 --> 00:29:00,180 |
|
woken. He's in a sleep of death. It is death which |
|
|
|
354 |
|
00:29:00,180 --> 00:29:03,920 |
|
ends a short life in a word which comes to seem |
|
|
|
355 |
|
00:29:03,920 --> 00:29:08,020 |
|
increasingly futile. Perhaps the son should never |
|
|
|
356 |
|
00:29:08,020 --> 00:29:11,940 |
|
have awoken this word in the first place. Then |
|
|
|
357 |
|
00:29:11,940 --> 00:29:15,860 |
|
these agonies and the futilities would not have to |
|
|
|
358 |
|
00:29:15,860 --> 00:29:18,460 |
|
be suffered. And this is what the poet wanted to |
|
|
|
359 |
|
00:29:18,460 --> 00:29:22,180 |
|
say. Perhaps like there was no need for life from |
|
|
|
360 |
|
00:29:22,180 --> 00:29:24,400 |
|
the very beginning, then we would not have |
|
|
|
361 |
|
00:29:24,400 --> 00:29:25,740 |
|
suffered all of this. |
|
|
|
362 |
|
00:29:28,600 --> 00:29:34,550 |
|
These contrasts seem to cancel each other. like |
|
|
|
363 |
|
00:29:34,550 --> 00:29:39,790 |
|
life and death, working and sleeping, cold and |
|
|
|
364 |
|
00:29:39,790 --> 00:29:44,790 |
|
hot. These contrasts seem to cancel each other out |
|
|
|
365 |
|
00:29:44,790 --> 00:29:48,190 |
|
and they produce a feeling of emptiness and |
|
|
|
366 |
|
00:29:48,190 --> 00:29:52,240 |
|
nothingness. When we have expectation, when we |
|
|
|
367 |
|
00:29:52,240 --> 00:29:56,620 |
|
have things which we are counseled by each other. |
|
|
|
368 |
|
00:29:56,960 --> 00:30:00,060 |
|
You have snow, it is counseled by the sun. You |
|
|
|
369 |
|
00:30:00,060 --> 00:30:03,300 |
|
have life, it is counseled by death. So this |
|
|
|
370 |
|
00:30:03,300 --> 00:30:07,240 |
|
counseling effect leaves us with sense of |
|
|
|
371 |
|
00:30:07,240 --> 00:30:10,000 |
|
nothingness. Think of emptiness. |
|
|
|
372 |
|
00:30:13,620 --> 00:30:16,400 |
|
And this is what the poet wanted us to share with |
|
|
|
373 |
|
00:30:16,400 --> 00:30:21,440 |
|
him. Like life, which starts like this, is futile. |
|
|
|
374 |
|
00:30:21,760 --> 00:30:26,520 |
|
Life is meaningless. These contrasts seem to |
|
|
|
375 |
|
00:30:26,520 --> 00:30:31,240 |
|
cancel each other out and produce a feeling of |
|
|
|
376 |
|
00:30:31,240 --> 00:30:34,480 |
|
emptiness and nothingness. Most prominent among |
|
|
|
377 |
|
00:30:34,480 --> 00:30:38,160 |
|
these contrasts is that of waking and sleeping. |
|
|
|
378 |
|
00:30:40,050 --> 00:30:42,470 |
|
Commentary B, it has to do with the sun, which I |
|
|
|
379 |
|
00:30:42,470 --> 00:30:47,530 |
|
remarked because the sun was introduced as |
|
|
|
380 |
|
00:30:47,530 --> 00:30:51,230 |
|
inanimate |
|
|
|
381 |
|
00:30:51,230 --> 00:30:54,470 |
|
and inanimate. And again, we have this contrast. |
|
|
|
382 |
|
00:30:55,190 --> 00:31:00,750 |
|
You can read it. It is there. Commentary C. Notice |
|
|
|
383 |
|
00:31:00,750 --> 00:31:03,910 |
|
the very characteristic of use of assonance. Sun, |
|
|
|
384 |
|
00:31:04,790 --> 00:31:12,490 |
|
Son, Once, France, Snow, Now, No, Seeds, Sides, |
|
|
|
385 |
|
00:31:12,910 --> 00:31:19,650 |
|
Star, Stir, Tol, Toil, All. These half rhymes, |
|
|
|
386 |
|
00:31:20,310 --> 00:31:24,090 |
|
they are not full rhymes. Leave a sense of |
|
|
|
387 |
|
00:31:24,090 --> 00:31:31,200 |
|
incompleteness on the ear. Cheated of our |
|
|
|
388 |
|
00:31:31,200 --> 00:31:34,820 |
|
expectations of a rhyme, we are referred back from |
|
|
|
389 |
|
00:31:34,820 --> 00:31:38,820 |
|
the poem itself as a formal triumph, which it is |
|
|
|
390 |
|
00:31:38,820 --> 00:31:42,660 |
|
to the poem's theme, to the frustration of the |
|
|
|
391 |
|
00:31:42,660 --> 00:31:46,240 |
|
form. We have frustration on the form, of pattern, |
|
|
|
392 |
|
00:31:47,460 --> 00:31:51,500 |
|
you know, because everything is frustrated in the |
|
|
|
393 |
|
00:31:51,500 --> 00:31:56,600 |
|
ruthless destructiveness of war. It is war. So in |
|
|
|
394 |
|
00:31:56,600 --> 00:32:00,100 |
|
war, we don't expect to see patterns. We expect |
|
|
|
395 |
|
00:32:00,100 --> 00:32:05,840 |
|
that everything is shattered. Okay, this is, you |
|
|
|
396 |
|
00:32:05,840 --> 00:32:08,860 |
|
know, a mini stylistic analysis. And I think you |
|
|
|
397 |
|
00:32:08,860 --> 00:32:11,820 |
|
have the full stylistic analysis in your reader. |
|
|
|
398 |
|
00:32:12,180 --> 00:32:16,340 |
|
You can read it along with the auction. And, you |
|
|
|
399 |
|
00:32:16,340 --> 00:32:21,200 |
|
know, that's it for this poem. I think we still |
|
|
|
400 |
|
00:32:21,200 --> 00:32:26,360 |
|
have 10 minutes to talk about miscellaneous things |
|
|
|
401 |
|
00:32:26,360 --> 00:32:31,960 |
|
before we finish. Okay, this is your reflection as |
|
|
|
402 |
|
00:32:31,960 --> 00:32:34,580 |
|
I promised. I'm going to look at this reflection. |
|
|
|
403 |
|
00:32:35,320 --> 00:32:40,860 |
|
If your mark here in this reflection let's say, is |
|
|
|
404 |
|
00:32:40,860 --> 00:32:44,760 |
|
higher than the mark in the first reflection, I'll |
|
|
|
405 |
|
00:32:44,760 --> 00:32:48,420 |
|
stick to this. If it is less, I'll just combine |
|
|
|
406 |
|
00:32:48,420 --> 00:32:52,040 |
|
both of them and take the average. So this would |
|
|
|
407 |
|
00:32:52,040 --> 00:32:58,300 |
|
be part of the final exam, your reflection. I |
|
|
|
408 |
|
00:32:58,300 --> 00:33:02,400 |
|
mean, I'm not returning this to you, but I'll be |
|
|
|
409 |
|
00:33:02,400 --> 00:33:05,880 |
|
returning for you the response and the report. |
|
|
|
410 |
|
00:33:07,150 --> 00:33:11,110 |
|
Concerning the exam, first of all, before the |
|
|
|
411 |
|
00:33:11,110 --> 00:33:15,490 |
|
exam, if you give me your response and report, I'm |
|
|
|
412 |
|
00:33:15,490 --> 00:33:19,730 |
|
not going to give it today. So tomorrow if we have |
|
|
|
413 |
|
00:33:19,730 --> 00:33:21,490 |
|
school, I'm not sure whether we have school |
|
|
|
414 |
|
00:33:21,490 --> 00:33:26,990 |
|
tomorrow or not. We do? So if we have school |
|
|
|
415 |
|
00:33:26,990 --> 00:33:30,730 |
|
tomorrow, I'll be bringing them. If not, they will |
|
|
|
416 |
|
00:33:30,730 --> 00:33:36,950 |
|
be in the teacher's room. We have, you know, I |
|
|
|
417 |
|
00:33:36,950 --> 00:33:40,230 |
|
mean, a room for the female teachers here. I can |
|
|
|
418 |
|
00:33:40,230 --> 00:33:45,510 |
|
put them there and pass them to you, okay? This is |
|
|
|
419 |
|
00:33:45,510 --> 00:33:50,170 |
|
for like your notebooks. Concerning the exam, I |
|
|
|
420 |
|
00:33:50,170 --> 00:33:54,620 |
|
know you want to see which poems should not be. |
|
|
|
421 |
|
00:33:55,460 --> 00:33:59,520 |
|
Like what we have been examined in the midterm |
|
|
|
422 |
|
00:33:59,520 --> 00:34:01,720 |
|
exam will be deleted. |
|
|
|
423 |
|
00:34:04,260 --> 00:34:11,660 |
|
Yes. So we'll start from Shakespeare. Yes. |
|
|
|
424 |
|
00:34:14,740 --> 00:34:19,620 |
|
And like the first question in the exam will be |
|
|
|
425 |
|
00:34:22,600 --> 00:34:26,160 |
|
will be comment, it is similar to the midterm |
|
|
|
426 |
|
00:34:26,160 --> 00:34:30,840 |
|
question. It is similar. I give you a model, you |
|
|
|
427 |
|
00:34:30,840 --> 00:34:34,620 |
|
have to follow the model. Do not escape by writing |
|
|
|
428 |
|
00:34:34,620 --> 00:34:37,900 |
|
about the poem. Stick to the extract, show its |
|
|
|
429 |
|
00:34:37,900 --> 00:34:42,720 |
|
relevance, show its stylistic value and like its |
|
|
|
430 |
|
00:34:42,720 --> 00:34:47,640 |
|
meaning. Explain, concentrate on the extract. The |
|
|
|
431 |
|
00:34:47,640 --> 00:34:52,100 |
|
second question would be essay questions. essay |
|
|
|
432 |
|
00:34:52,100 --> 00:34:55,920 |
|
questions. I'll be giving you a statement to talk, |
|
|
|
433 |
|
00:34:56,180 --> 00:34:59,520 |
|
you know, about the features of a school and to |
|
|
|
434 |
|
00:34:59,520 --> 00:35:01,580 |
|
demonstrate, for example, romanticism, |
|
|
|
435 |
|
00:35:01,780 --> 00:35:04,960 |
|
metaphysical, Elizabethan, you know, for example, |
|
|
|
436 |
|
00:35:04,980 --> 00:35:07,940 |
|
the theme of immortality has been, and Elizabethan |
|
|
|
437 |
|
00:35:07,940 --> 00:35:11,300 |
|
discussed this with reference to the poems, you |
|
|
|
438 |
|
00:35:11,300 --> 00:35:14,180 |
|
know, you have studied. You might refer to the |
|
|
|
439 |
|
00:35:14,180 --> 00:35:18,800 |
|
poem with counsel, if you want. You might want to |
|
|
|
440 |
|
00:35:18,800 --> 00:35:22,860 |
|
refer. But it could be metaphysical, it could be |
|
|
|
441 |
|
00:35:22,860 --> 00:35:27,120 |
|
romantic, it could be Victorian, it could be pre |
|
|
|
442 |
|
00:35:27,120 --> 00:35:31,640 |
|
-romantic. See? This is an ASIC question. The most |
|
|
|
443 |
|
00:35:31,640 --> 00:35:36,330 |
|
important thing is to substantiate. to give |
|
|
|
444 |
|
00:35:36,330 --> 00:35:40,670 |
|
evidence from what you say from the poems. And I |
|
|
|
445 |
|
00:35:40,670 --> 00:35:44,110 |
|
might tell you two or three poems, you know. I |
|
|
|
446 |
|
00:35:44,110 --> 00:35:49,450 |
|
might decide, yes, in reference to one or two. I'm |
|
|
|
447 |
|
00:35:49,450 --> 00:35:56,090 |
|
not sure how many poems. The last question, you |
|
|
|
448 |
|
00:35:56,090 --> 00:35:59,750 |
|
know, usually it is unseen. |
|
|
|
449 |
|
00:36:01,170 --> 00:36:06,690 |
|
A poem. But usually it is unseen, and it is good. |
|
|
|
450 |
|
00:36:07,490 --> 00:36:11,670 |
|
But sometimes I do give a change, you know? So I'm |
|
|
|
451 |
|
00:36:11,670 --> 00:36:14,890 |
|
not sure what I'm going to do. I might change this |
|
|
|
452 |
|
00:36:14,890 --> 00:36:20,730 |
|
question. It might remain the same. Because each |
|
|
|
453 |
|
00:36:20,730 --> 00:36:26,310 |
|
exam has, you know, a surprise. You know, |
|
|
|
454 |
|
00:36:26,350 --> 00:36:30,830 |
|
something. Okay, so we'll see. It might be similar |
|
|
|
455 |
|
00:36:30,830 --> 00:36:37,090 |
|
to the, the mid question, which, you know. Huh? |
|
|
|
456 |
|
00:36:37,530 --> 00:36:42,470 |
|
Bitter? No, the unseen poem will be fine. So let's |
|
|
|
457 |
|
00:36:42,470 --> 00:36:45,690 |
|
see. Let's see, because you know, you didn't do |
|
|
|
458 |
|
00:36:45,690 --> 00:36:49,950 |
|
well with the question in the midterm. But I |
|
|
|
459 |
|
00:36:49,950 --> 00:36:53,390 |
|
think, you know, it might, it is a possibility. It |
|
|
|
460 |
|
00:36:53,390 --> 00:36:57,700 |
|
could be within it. You see? Two questions lie |
|
|
|
461 |
|
00:36:57,700 --> 00:37:01,480 |
|
together. Now at the end, I have nothing except |
|
|
|
462 |
|
00:37:01,480 --> 00:37:09,120 |
|
thanking you. I know I was very hard, very tough |
|
|
|
463 |
|
00:37:09,120 --> 00:37:13,380 |
|
with those students who were not coming. I |
|
|
|
464 |
|
00:37:13,380 --> 00:37:17,060 |
|
succeeded. And this is what I felt in making you |
|
|
|
465 |
|
00:37:17,060 --> 00:37:20,220 |
|
work hard. And this is what I wanted. And I wish |
|
|
|
466 |
|
00:37:20,220 --> 00:37:23,220 |
|
all of you that you would succeed. If you need |
|
|
|
467 |
|
00:37:23,220 --> 00:37:26,460 |
|
anything, just let me know either by sending an |
|
|
|
468 |
|
00:37:26,460 --> 00:37:32,170 |
|
email or like seeing me in my office. Okay, I |
|
|
|
469 |
|
00:37:32,170 --> 00:37:35,890 |
|
might add additional office hours like to meet |
|
|
|
470 |
|
00:37:35,890 --> 00:37:39,550 |
|
you. So I'll be like on Sunday as well. I'm |
|
|
|
471 |
|
00:37:39,550 --> 00:37:45,130 |
|
Monday, as you know, from 11 to 12, but I'll be on |
|
|
|
472 |
|
00:37:45,130 --> 00:37:52,610 |
|
Sunday also from 9.30 to 12. I'll be waiting for |
|
|
|
473 |
|
00:37:52,610 --> 00:37:55,690 |
|
you if you need anything. Sunday and Tuesday. |
|
|
|
474 |
|
00:37:56,090 --> 00:37:56,790 |
|
Thank you very much. |
|
|
|
|