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Good morning, everybody. How are you? Had a nice |
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2 |
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time over the long week end, yes? Good. Today, |
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we're going to see Raleigh's poem, but from a |
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different perspective. We're going to see it as a |
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parody. |
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Like in this poem, |
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I mean, Raleigh parodies Marlow. |
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I mean, when I say parody, have you ever thought |
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what is a parody? |
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10 |
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So in this lecture, we'll talk about what is |
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11 |
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parody, and then we're going to see how Raleigh |
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12 |
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parodies or parodies like Marlowe in this reply. |
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13 |
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But let me ask you, what is a parody? Yes, please. |
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Yes. |
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So yes, the main purpose of the parody is like to |
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make fun, is to ridicule or to mock. So one is |
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writing, let's say, a novel or |
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a story in response to another novel or a story or |
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a poem. And the main purpose of this is to |
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satirize, to parody, to parody, you know, the |
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original one. Now, is this what is happening in |
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like Marlow's or Raleigh's reply? Is he mocking |
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him? Is he, you know, making fun of him? This is |
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what we are going to see. But the question is, |
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like, how he is making fun of him, you know? How? |
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Like, he should be making fun of him on a |
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thematic, you know, level, on a linguistic level, |
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on a form level. So this is what we are going to |
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see today. Like if we remember Marlow's |
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poem is about what? Marlow's poem is about the |
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simplicity of the pastoral life. It is about the |
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immortality of the pastoral life. It is a |
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33 |
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suggestion. It is an invitation, like, for the |
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lady, you know, for Marlon's lady to go and live |
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with him in that beautiful life. Now, we want to |
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see, like, how he is parodizing, you know, the |
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37 |
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whole poem. And, like, I want, before I start, I |
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38 |
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want you to be aware You know, when we say parody |
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of the word, of certain verbs, like verbs like, I |
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might write for them, like, because they will help |
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you in your, |
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in speaking about the parody. |
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Do you know what this mean, mock? To mock? Okay. |
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44 |
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What is this? |
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45 |
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Could you like bring like the page size, the size |
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46 |
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of the page? Okay. Can anybody like come and fix |
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47 |
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this? So we might need to use words like, or |
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48 |
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verbs, like mock, |
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mock, |
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50 |
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satirizes, |
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51 |
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refutes, |
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52 |
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you know refutes, debunks, |
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invalidates, |
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54 |
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What do I do? Yeah, just like I want a small, I |
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55 |
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mean a large font, a large font. So when we are |
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56 |
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discussing how this is a parody, we might need to |
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57 |
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use these verbs. How he makes fun of him. How he, |
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58 |
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you know, disdains his idea. You might need the |
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59 |
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word disdain. |
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60 |
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So all these are necessary to use when you are |
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61 |
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explaining the parody. Now, you mentioned parody. |
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62 |
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It's an imitation. What is he imitating? If we |
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63 |
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look at Marlow's poem, you remember how it went? |
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64 |
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Come live with me and be my love. And here you see |
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65 |
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if all the word and love were young and truth in |
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66 |
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every shepherd's tongue. So what do you notice? Do |
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67 |
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you notice like the same rhyme and the same |
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68 |
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rhythm? What is like the rhythm? Do you remember |
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69 |
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the rhythm of Marlow's poem? Iambic pentameter. So |
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70 |
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again, if all the word and love were young, and |
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71 |
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truth in every shepherd's tongue. So if you scan |
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72 |
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this and you say, if we |
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73 |
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take this line, and make it scansion if the word |
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74 |
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and |
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love were |
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76 |
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enough. |
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77 |
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Now I think if the word is stress, which is |
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78 |
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stress? What is stress? |
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if they were and |
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80 |
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love were |
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81 |
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enough so again we are having if they were and |
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82 |
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love were enough like we have how many meters do |
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83 |
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we have? I mean, how many feet do we have? If the |
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84 |
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word, word, one. And love? Two. Where? Enough. You |
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85 |
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know? Three and four, because enough. Four. Four. |
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86 |
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And you know, each syllable has two. So it is the |
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87 |
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same rhythm. And the same, if you look, it is the |
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88 |
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same rhyme. |
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89 |
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B, A, A, B, B. So if you go to the original poem. |
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90 |
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Yes. And he's using almost the same number of |
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91 |
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stanzas, except in the reply you have one missing |
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92 |
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stanza, which is about the food one. Now, we have |
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93 |
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to see how he's making fun of him. How he's making |
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94 |
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fun of him. How is he ridiculing him? Is he making |
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95 |
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fun of him? Yes. How? How is he criticizing him? |
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96 |
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How is he satirizing him? How he is refuting? Now, |
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97 |
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when I say this is a parody, I don't want you to |
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98 |
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compare or contrast, because this is a common |
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99 |
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mistake. Usually in the exam, last year, I asked, |
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100 |
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to what extent is this poem a parody? And most of |
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101 |
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the students kept comparing and contrasting |
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102 |
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between the two poems, and they missed the point |
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103 |
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of the question. So when I say a parody, I want |
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104 |
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you to show me how he is making fun, how he is |
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105 |
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underestimating, how he is devaluing the whole |
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106 |
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poem. You see what I mean? So let's see how. Yes. |
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107 |
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Yes. |
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108 |
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Yes. |
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109 |
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So what was seen as immortal in Marlow is becoming |
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110 |
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Mortal. So in Raleigh or in Marlow, love and life |
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111 |
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were immortal. But here they are mortal. How? How |
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112 |
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do you say, like, how they are mortal? You know? |
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113 |
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How they are mortal. Like, do you have evidence |
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114 |
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from the poem that these things are mortal? Yes. |
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115 |
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How they are mortal. Yes? Okay, this is what you |
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116 |
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can from the outside, but from the inside of the |
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117 |
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poem. Yes, how? Yes, Jahan? It's like we discussed |
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118 |
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it last time, when we took the very first line and |
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119 |
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he said the word if. It's actually like, it's as |
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120 |
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if he's stating that the world and love are not |
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121 |
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enough, and he's saying that if they were. So, do |
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122 |
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you want to say the assumption, like, the |
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123 |
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assumption that life and love are not enough? |
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124 |
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Because this is, you know, an assumption. This is |
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125 |
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an assumption. But, like, I want more concrete, |
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126 |
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you know, images or evidence from the poem that |
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127 |
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indicate that all these, yes please? When he says, |
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128 |
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the girls, the shoes, die. |
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129 |
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Yes, this is an example of ephemerality, like you |
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130 |
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know what it means, transience. Ephemeral, like |
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131 |
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something which doesn't last. |
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132 |
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Means transient. |
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133 |
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Something which doesn't last. Yes, like these, thy |
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134 |
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gown, thy shoes, you know, all the golden |
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135 |
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promises, you know, will be like transient, like |
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136 |
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will be temporal. Okay, good. Also, he said the |
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137 |
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flowers will fade. The flowers fade, okay. |
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138 |
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The flowers fade like here, it's an image of |
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139 |
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morality, sorry, mortality. What else? Okay, let's |
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140 |
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go to the poem. Yes. Yes, please. |
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141 |
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Excellent. Yes, time drives the flock from field |
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142 |
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to fold. This is an image of what? Destruction, |
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143 |
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devastation. It is an image of finality, end. You |
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144 |
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know, there is nothing called mortal. Look here. |
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145 |
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Time drives the flux from field to field. So you |
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146 |
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can say, you know, like Rani in this poem |
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147 |
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undercuts or undermines or invalidates, whatever. |
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148 |
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You can use refutes. Like Marlow's assumption |
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149 |
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about the immortality of life by saying that time |
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150 |
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will put an end to each thing, to each immortal |
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151 |
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thing. So yes, here, more images, more images of |
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152 |
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mortality. |
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153 |
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00:14:06,770 --> 00:14:10,010 |
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Yes, here we have to be insider, to look at |
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154 |
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images. |
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155 |
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What about rocks growing old? What's been rocks |
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156 |
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growing old? It's an image of aging. It's an image |
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157 |
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of change. It's an image of transformation. Yeah. |
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158 |
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Yes. What else? |
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159 |
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What about the image of rottenness? Like here. |
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160 |
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Yeah. What will happen? |
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161 |
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The force. |
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Yes, like thy gowns, thy shoes, thy bed of roses, |
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163 |
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thy cap, thy kirtle, and thy poses, soon break, |
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164 |
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soon wither, soon forgotten, infolirized, |
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165 |
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unreasoned, rotten. Like everything will be |
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166 |
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rotten. And rottenness is an image of decay. It's |
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167 |
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an image of decay. So as you see here, he |
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168 |
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undermines. |
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169 |
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He mocks Marlos by showing that nothing is |
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170 |
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immortal. So he mocks him by subverting his theme. |
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171 |
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I like the word subvert. Subvert like twisting his |
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172 |
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theme, showing the opposite. If you want to |
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173 |
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subvert something, you are showing the opposite. |
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174 |
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Subvert. |
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175 |
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Yes, he subverts the |
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176 |
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field by showing the opposite. |
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177 |
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The parody here is working on one level, which is |
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178 |
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thematic, you know, like he's taking the theme, he |
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179 |
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satirizes, he mocks him by showing, you know, an |
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180 |
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opposite theme. Also, we have other, like, it |
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181 |
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could be by using lexical choices, by using other |
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182 |
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linguistic choices. So what can you tell me about |
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183 |
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Here, if we look at the words, |
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184 |
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Marlowe, in his poem, Come Live With Me and Be My |
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185 |
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Love, and We All The Pleasures Prove. So if you |
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186 |
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talk about love and pleasure, if we go to Marlowe, |
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187 |
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love and pleasure, beauty, what are these things? |
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188 |
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You know, like in grammar, we call them what? Are |
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189 |
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they, you know, concrete nouns or what? They are |
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190 |
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abstract nouns. They are abstract nouns. And here, |
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191 |
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like in the poem, again, he keeps to the same |
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192 |
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choices. He uses them, if all the word and love |
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193 |
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were young. Like, again, he stresses that these |
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194 |
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things are abstract. And what is abstract is |
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195 |
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remote from reality, from real things. See? And |
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196 |
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even like, because this is, who's replying to |
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197 |
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Marlo? |
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198 |
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Who's replying to Marlo in Raleigh? Who's, who's |
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199 |
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like the speaker? The lady. But what is the lady |
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200 |
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called? The nymph. What is a nymph? What is a |
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201 |
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nymph? Yeah, I know, a nymph, but it is a mythical |
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202 |
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creature. A mythical. Originally, the word nymph, |
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203 |
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you know, is from Latin, which means a mythical. |
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204 |
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And what is mythical? When we are saying mythical, |
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205 |
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this is a myth. What is myth? A myth is something |
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206 |
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unreal. Unreal. So here, again, he is slapping |
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207 |
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him. He is slapping him by showing that he's |
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208 |
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talking about unreal things. Look, abstract nouns. |
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209 |
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Look at the nymph, which is like imaginary |
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210 |
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creatures. So by choosing words, by choosing |
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211 |
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words, you know, that have to do with unreal |
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212 |
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things. And this, again, is, you know, supported |
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213 |
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by what? By if. If all. If all the word. You see? |
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214 |
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If all the word and love by if. If, as we said |
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215 |
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last time, It is hypothetical. |
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216 |
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And the hypothesis has to do with his attitude. He |
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217 |
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is, like if somebody says, if all the word and |
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218 |
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love were enough. So this is, what does it |
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219 |
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00:19:59,960 --> 00:20:08,410 |
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reflect? It reflects the attitude of the poet And |
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220 |
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00:20:08,410 --> 00:20:11,510 |
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what do we call this attitude? It is an attitude |
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221 |
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of cynicism. |
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222 |
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00:20:17,890 --> 00:20:21,490 |
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He's cynical. He is skeptical. |
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223 |
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00:20:24,050 --> 00:20:33,410 |
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So by using if, by using if and again could. If |
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224 |
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you look at the end, |
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225 |
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But could youth lust and love still breed? Had |
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226 |
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joys? Again here, we have the conditional. So the |
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227 |
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00:20:47,340 --> 00:20:51,780 |
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poem begins with the conditional and ends with the |
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228 |
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00:20:51,780 --> 00:20:54,480 |
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conditional. And the conditional has to do with |
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229 |
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00:20:54,480 --> 00:20:59,580 |
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the attitude of cynicism. So we could easily say |
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230 |
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00:20:59,580 --> 00:21:06,480 |
|
Raleigh is skeptical, doesn't believe Marlowe. |
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231 |
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00:21:07,400 --> 00:21:14,620 |
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He thinks, that the notions of immortal love and |
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232 |
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life are nonsensical. They are not true. And this |
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233 |
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00:21:22,760 --> 00:21:28,620 |
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cynical attitude is demonstrated by the use of F |
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234 |
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00:21:28,620 --> 00:21:32,780 |
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or the conditional use, I mean, the conditional of |
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235 |
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00:21:32,780 --> 00:21:38,140 |
|
F at the beginning and could and had at the end. |
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236 |
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00:21:39,040 --> 00:21:45,700 |
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OK. More. Like, if we look here, |
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237 |
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thy belt. Look at the pronouns. Look at the |
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238 |
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00:21:55,280 --> 00:21:58,700 |
|
repetition of these pronouns. Thy belt of straw |
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239 |
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00:21:58,700 --> 00:22:04,960 |
|
and ivy buds. Thy coral clasp and amber studs. And |
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240 |
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00:22:04,960 --> 00:22:10,290 |
|
I think, you know, Thy shoes, thy beds of roses, |
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241 |
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00:22:10,710 --> 00:22:16,810 |
|
thy cap, thy curtain, and thy poses. So here, yes, |
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242 |
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00:22:17,030 --> 00:22:21,790 |
|
these lexical |
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243 |
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00:22:21,790 --> 00:22:25,230 |
|
or these syntactic choices, you know, thy, thy, |
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244 |
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00:22:25,410 --> 00:22:29,190 |
|
with the repetition, what do they convey with |
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245 |
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00:22:29,190 --> 00:22:34,870 |
|
them? A sense of? Rejection. Yeah, they induced, |
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246 |
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00:22:35,230 --> 00:22:37,770 |
|
you know, a sense of boredom. But when you say, |
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247 |
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00:22:37,930 --> 00:22:44,450 |
|
thy, thy. Yeah, like, he's sarcastic. He's |
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248 |
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00:22:44,450 --> 00:22:49,510 |
|
sarcastic. He makes fun of him. He, you know, |
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249 |
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00:22:50,530 --> 00:22:55,670 |
|
refutes all his |
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250 |
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00:22:56,980 --> 00:23:00,440 |
|
allegations, all his assumptions about the |
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251 |
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00:23:00,440 --> 00:23:06,120 |
|
immortality, the beauty. Now if we look, we have |
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252 |
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00:23:06,120 --> 00:23:10,500 |
|
just seen how he was mocking the idea of |
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253 |
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00:23:10,500 --> 00:23:12,840 |
|
immortality and how he's mocking the idea of |
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254 |
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00:23:12,840 --> 00:23:17,080 |
|
beauty. Say again, you know, here you have images |
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255 |
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00:23:17,080 --> 00:23:21,820 |
|
of horror, you have images of ugliness, you know, |
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256 |
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00:23:21,900 --> 00:23:24,840 |
|
and if we go to them, like look here, when |
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257 |
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00:23:24,840 --> 00:23:29,440 |
|
something is fading, is it beautiful? Yeah. When |
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258 |
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00:23:29,440 --> 00:23:35,620 |
|
something is turning from like lush green into |
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259 |
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00:23:35,620 --> 00:23:40,180 |
|
dark, you know, dark black or something like this, |
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260 |
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00:23:40,560 --> 00:23:43,490 |
|
it is an image of death. And this is what is |
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261 |
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00:23:43,490 --> 00:23:49,790 |
|
happening. But again, thy belt of straw and ivy |
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262 |
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00:23:49,790 --> 00:23:55,870 |
|
buds, thy coral clasp and amber studs, thy, thy. |
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263 |
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00:23:57,370 --> 00:24:01,950 |
|
So what does this show? It shows like, I mean, |
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|
264 |
|
00:24:02,030 --> 00:24:08,950 |
|
here, what Rani wants to say, that these things |
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|
265 |
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00:24:08,950 --> 00:24:16,210 |
|
are artificial. Their beauty is artificial. It is |
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|
266 |
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00:24:16,210 --> 00:24:18,990 |
|
not genuine beauty. Yeah, it is not genuine |
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|
267 |
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00:24:18,990 --> 00:24:22,210 |
|
because it is not lasting beauty. |
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|
268 |
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00:24:38,150 --> 00:24:43,060 |
|
And If you go up a little bit, for all the world |
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269 |
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00:24:43,060 --> 00:24:45,480 |
|
and love were young and truth in every show, these |
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|
270 |
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00:24:45,480 --> 00:24:49,860 |
|
pretty pleasures, the word pretty. When he says |
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|
271 |
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00:24:49,860 --> 00:24:53,160 |
|
these pretty, does he mean like they are pretty? |
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|
272 |
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00:24:54,340 --> 00:24:57,720 |
|
So what does he want to say? Like, don't you think |
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|
273 |
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00:24:57,720 --> 00:25:00,940 |
|
he's sarcastic here? So what does he want to say |
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|
274 |
|
00:25:00,940 --> 00:25:01,320 |
|
exactly? |
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|
275 |
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00:25:04,220 --> 00:25:05,060 |
|
Yes, please. |
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|
276 |
|
00:25:08,430 --> 00:25:11,550 |
|
Yeah, they're pretty, and they are not pretty. |
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|
277 |
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00:25:11,770 --> 00:25:15,490 |
|
These pretty, like he was, it's an irony. These |
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|
278 |
|
00:25:15,490 --> 00:25:19,910 |
|
pretty pleasures make me move. Again, he wanted to |
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|
279 |
|
00:25:19,910 --> 00:25:24,050 |
|
say that these things are artificial, are not |
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|
280 |
|
00:25:24,050 --> 00:25:26,710 |
|
genuine, so I'm not coming with you. |
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|
281 |
|
00:25:29,950 --> 00:25:34,610 |
|
If we look at the artistic aspects, I mean, like |
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|
282 |
|
00:25:34,610 --> 00:25:39,720 |
|
the metaphors, like how he employs the metaphors, |
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|
283 |
|
00:25:40,260 --> 00:25:44,700 |
|
how he employs the alliteration, also we see like |
|
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|
284 |
|
00:25:44,700 --> 00:25:48,900 |
|
he's satirizing him. When he says, time drives the |
|
|
|
285 |
|
00:25:48,900 --> 00:25:53,040 |
|
flux from field to fold. The alliteration here, |
|
|
|
286 |
|
00:25:53,820 --> 00:26:02,520 |
|
you know, the alliteration shows what? Yeah, shows |
|
|
|
287 |
|
00:26:02,520 --> 00:26:11,600 |
|
an image of horror. It reflects how tough, |
|
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|
288 |
|
00:26:12,780 --> 00:26:18,220 |
|
how fatal will be like the ravages of time. Time |
|
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|
289 |
|
00:26:18,220 --> 00:26:24,980 |
|
will be destructive. And this toughness, which, |
|
|
|
290 |
|
00:26:26,520 --> 00:26:31,920 |
|
you know, we feel from the alliteration, it |
|
|
|
291 |
|
00:26:31,920 --> 00:26:39,400 |
|
contrasts with the musical tone of Marlow's poem. |
|
|
|
292 |
|
00:26:39,540 --> 00:26:45,040 |
|
If you remember Marlow's poem, it was full of |
|
|
|
293 |
|
00:26:45,040 --> 00:26:49,740 |
|
music. It was full of the singing of the birds, |
|
|
|
294 |
|
00:26:49,860 --> 00:26:55,820 |
|
the madrigals. Here, we have, instead of the |
|
|
|
295 |
|
00:26:55,820 --> 00:27:01,770 |
|
melodious The melodious madrigals, we have time |
|
|
|
296 |
|
00:27:01,770 --> 00:27:09,130 |
|
drives the flux from field to fold, and rivers |
|
|
|
297 |
|
00:27:09,130 --> 00:27:16,170 |
|
rage and rocks grow cold. So the serenity, the |
|
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|
298 |
|
00:27:16,170 --> 00:27:23,510 |
|
tranquility of Marlow's poem are subverted. |
|
|
|
299 |
|
00:27:25,560 --> 00:27:29,760 |
|
replaced, subverted like they are distorted. By |
|
|
|
300 |
|
00:27:29,760 --> 00:27:35,540 |
|
what? By images, roaring images, by images of |
|
|
|
301 |
|
00:27:35,540 --> 00:27:36,200 |
|
destruction. |
|
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|
302 |
|
00:27:39,160 --> 00:27:47,900 |
|
Okay. And Philemon becomes dumb. You know, the |
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|
303 |
|
00:27:47,900 --> 00:27:54,340 |
|
singing poet, There we have the poet was singing, |
|
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|
304 |
|
00:27:54,920 --> 00:27:59,340 |
|
but here the philomel becomes dumb. Here people |
|
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|
305 |
|
00:27:59,340 --> 00:28:06,320 |
|
are speechless. Why? So like the sense of |
|
|
|
306 |
|
00:28:06,320 --> 00:28:11,100 |
|
security, the sense of tranquility are replaced by |
|
|
|
307 |
|
00:28:11,100 --> 00:28:17,100 |
|
horror and shock. Here there is a shock. Why would |
|
|
|
308 |
|
00:28:17,100 --> 00:28:23,390 |
|
philomel be dumb? Because of the horror of the |
|
|
|
309 |
|
00:28:23,390 --> 00:28:26,710 |
|
upheaval. You know what I mean by upheaval? The |
|
|
|
310 |
|
00:28:26,710 --> 00:28:30,230 |
|
change. It will be global change. You know, |
|
|
|
311 |
|
00:28:30,330 --> 00:28:34,390 |
|
nothing will remain as it is, so the phenomenon |
|
|
|
312 |
|
00:28:34,390 --> 00:28:40,860 |
|
will be done. You know? Again, this is like a |
|
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|
313 |
|
00:28:40,860 --> 00:28:44,380 |
|
myth. A mythical philomel is a mythical creature, |
|
|
|
314 |
|
00:28:44,480 --> 00:28:49,420 |
|
but philomel means a bird, you know? So you can in |
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|
315 |
|
00:28:49,420 --> 00:28:53,220 |
|
both ways, like the philomel is done because of |
|
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|
316 |
|
00:28:53,220 --> 00:28:57,940 |
|
the shock out of the horror of the transformation |
|
|
|
317 |
|
00:28:57,940 --> 00:28:59,000 |
|
or the upheaval. |
|
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|
318 |
|
00:29:08,860 --> 00:29:14,120 |
|
So I think we started to dislike. Huh? We started |
|
|
|
319 |
|
00:29:14,120 --> 00:29:20,420 |
|
to dislike. Marlow's poem started to lose. The |
|
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|
320 |
|
00:29:20,420 --> 00:29:25,320 |
|
flowers do fade and wanton feels. To weigh word, |
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|
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321 |
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00:29:25,400 --> 00:29:28,660 |
|
winter reckoning yields. A honey tongue. Look, |
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322 |
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00:29:28,760 --> 00:29:31,940 |
|
again, this is another technique. A honey tongue, |
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323 |
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00:29:32,640 --> 00:29:36,150 |
|
a heart of gold. Fancy spring, but soon it falls. |
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324 |
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00:29:36,590 --> 00:29:41,150 |
|
Now, what is he doing? He's juxtaposing. You know |
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325 |
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00:29:41,150 --> 00:29:44,050 |
|
what's been juxtaposed? To put side by side |
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326 |
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00:29:44,050 --> 00:29:50,650 |
|
things. A honey tongue, what is sweet, will be |
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327 |
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00:29:50,650 --> 00:29:57,800 |
|
bitter of gold. What is lovely will be sorrowful |
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328 |
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00:29:57,800 --> 00:30:02,700 |
|
and ugly. So again, the juxtaposition, like the |
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329 |
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00:30:02,700 --> 00:30:05,880 |
|
technique of juxtaposition, like here in this |
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330 |
|
00:30:05,880 --> 00:30:10,920 |
|
poem, he juxtaposes beauty with ugliness. He |
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331 |
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00:30:10,920 --> 00:30:14,680 |
|
juxtaposes sweetness with bitterness. So |
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332 |
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00:30:14,680 --> 00:30:19,620 |
|
juxtaposition is like to invalidate, to show that |
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333 |
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00:30:20,220 --> 00:30:24,360 |
|
whatever was beautiful in Marlow is nothing to |
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334 |
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00:30:24,360 --> 00:30:28,280 |
|
show the reality, the opposite reality of Marlow's |
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335 |
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00:30:28,280 --> 00:30:28,720 |
|
assumption. |
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336 |
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00:30:35,020 --> 00:30:44,060 |
|
So as you see here, it's a full parody and you can |
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337 |
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00:30:45,030 --> 00:30:49,130 |
|
Start your writing, how it is a parody, by showing |
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338 |
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00:30:49,130 --> 00:30:54,610 |
|
this. But you can be more organized. You see? You |
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339 |
|
00:30:54,610 --> 00:30:59,450 |
|
should show how he is making fun of the |
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340 |
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00:30:59,450 --> 00:31:03,930 |
|
suggestion. He's making fun of the theme itself. |
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341 |
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00:31:04,450 --> 00:31:10,790 |
|
He's making fun of all the promises. So the |
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342 |
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00:31:10,790 --> 00:31:15,180 |
|
promises, which were very enticing, are becoming |
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343 |
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00:31:15,180 --> 00:31:19,440 |
|
repugnant. So what has been enticing, you know |
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344 |
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00:31:19,440 --> 00:31:23,480 |
|
what's been enticing, tempting in Marlow is |
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345 |
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00:31:23,480 --> 00:31:28,060 |
|
becoming here repugnant. Repugnant like hateful, |
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346 |
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00:31:28,180 --> 00:31:30,600 |
|
something we don't like, repugnant. |
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347 |
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00:31:43,310 --> 00:31:46,830 |
|
Yeah, repugnant. So I think the cup of flowers, |
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348 |
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00:31:47,950 --> 00:31:51,470 |
|
the curtain, which was made of myrtle, are now |
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349 |
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00:31:51,470 --> 00:31:56,070 |
|
what? They are things which they, they, we don't |
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350 |
|
00:31:56,070 --> 00:32:00,030 |
|
like them. They are no longer tempting. They are |
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351 |
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00:32:00,030 --> 00:32:03,270 |
|
no longer enticing. On the contrary, they are |
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352 |
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00:32:03,270 --> 00:32:06,870 |
|
images of horror and death. They are images of |
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353 |
|
00:32:06,870 --> 00:32:12,990 |
|
transience. So like here, you see, he rallies by |
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354 |
|
00:32:12,990 --> 00:32:17,530 |
|
doing this. He undermines everything. He |
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355 |
|
00:32:17,530 --> 00:32:20,610 |
|
satirizes. He mocks. He rebukes. This is what I |
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356 |
|
00:32:20,610 --> 00:32:26,010 |
|
want you to do when you write the parody. Okay, |
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|
357 |
|
00:32:26,250 --> 00:32:29,450 |
|
this is about the parody. Now we have some time to |
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|
358 |
|
00:32:29,450 --> 00:32:32,750 |
|
talk about, because this is like your reflection, |
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|
359 |
|
00:32:32,950 --> 00:32:36,170 |
|
will be your reflection. So I want you to compare |
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|
360 |
|
00:32:36,170 --> 00:32:39,950 |
|
and to contrast between the two poems. And when |
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|
361 |
|
00:32:39,950 --> 00:32:43,470 |
|
you are writing a comparison, you know, I want you |
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|
362 |
|
00:32:43,470 --> 00:32:46,410 |
|
like to take into consideration one. So when you |
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|
363 |
|
00:32:46,410 --> 00:32:50,080 |
|
are contrasting and Comparing. What are you going |
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|
364 |
|
00:32:50,080 --> 00:32:54,220 |
|
to do? And I think here, you have to contrast more |
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|
365 |
|
00:32:54,220 --> 00:33:00,300 |
|
than compare. But there are, you know, when I say |
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|
366 |
|
00:33:00,300 --> 00:33:03,560 |
|
compare, you talk about similarities. Contrast |
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|
367 |
|
00:33:03,560 --> 00:33:11,940 |
|
talk about, you know, yes, differences. You can do |
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|
368 |
|
00:33:11,940 --> 00:33:15,360 |
|
this by writing paragraph about the theme of this |
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|
369 |
|
00:33:15,360 --> 00:33:18,480 |
|
poem and writing a paragraph about the theme of |
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|
370 |
|
00:33:18,480 --> 00:33:21,120 |
|
this poem, by writing a paragraph about the tone |
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|
371 |
|
00:33:21,120 --> 00:33:23,940 |
|
of this poem, by writing another paragraph. This |
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|
372 |
|
00:33:23,940 --> 00:33:27,580 |
|
is like block. You assume the block. But if you |
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|
373 |
|
00:33:27,580 --> 00:33:32,320 |
|
want to, you know, to take the point and mix them, |
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|
374 |
|
00:33:32,500 --> 00:33:35,400 |
|
it's okay. It's up to you. You say, okay, the tone |
|
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|
375 |
|
00:33:35,400 --> 00:33:40,630 |
|
of Marlon's poem is so-and-so. While the tone of, |
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|
376 |
|
00:33:40,870 --> 00:33:45,050 |
|
you know, you can use while, whereas, on one hand, |
|
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|
377 |
|
00:33:45,150 --> 00:33:48,790 |
|
on the other hand, like these transitional words |
|
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|
378 |
|
00:33:48,790 --> 00:33:51,470 |
|
you are familiar with in your writing courses. |
|
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|
379 |
|
00:33:52,210 --> 00:33:55,850 |
|
Okay. So when you want to compare and contrast, |
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|
380 |
|
00:33:58,390 --> 00:34:03,030 |
|
what do you want to compare? I think you can |
|
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|
381 |
|
00:34:03,030 --> 00:34:12,970 |
|
compare Yeah, the theme. The theme. The rhyme. The |
|
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|
382 |
|
00:34:12,970 --> 00:34:13,270 |
|
rhythm. |
|
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|
383 |
|
00:34:16,030 --> 00:34:20,850 |
|
You can talk about figures of speech. I mean, the |
|
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|
384 |
|
00:34:20,850 --> 00:34:25,230 |
|
style. The style in general. The style includes |
|
|
|
385 |
|
00:34:25,230 --> 00:34:29,230 |
|
figures of speech, includes alliteration, includes |
|
|
|
386 |
|
00:34:29,230 --> 00:34:34,950 |
|
sound, music. What else? So we have the theme. |
|
|
|
387 |
|
00:34:38,210 --> 00:34:40,670 |
|
Yeah, when you talk about the language, we are |
|
|
|
388 |
|
00:34:40,670 --> 00:34:47,310 |
|
talking about the style. The theme. The tone. What |
|
|
|
389 |
|
00:34:47,310 --> 00:34:49,730 |
|
is the tone, by the way? When we say the tone, |
|
|
|
390 |
|
00:34:49,810 --> 00:34:53,910 |
|
what is the tone? Like usually people are mixing |
|
|
|
391 |
|
00:34:53,910 --> 00:34:57,830 |
|
between the tone and attitude. What is a tone? |
|
|
|
392 |
|
00:35:01,850 --> 00:35:02,950 |
|
And what is attitude? |
|
|
|
393 |
|
00:35:06,850 --> 00:35:10,610 |
|
What is the tone and what is the attitude? What is |
|
|
|
394 |
|
00:35:10,610 --> 00:35:13,690 |
|
the difference between the two? Yes? |
|
|
|
395 |
|
00:35:16,610 --> 00:35:25,730 |
|
The tone. The tone is the impact of the words on |
|
|
|
396 |
|
00:35:25,730 --> 00:35:31,080 |
|
us. the impact of the words on us. Like you look |
|
|
|
397 |
|
00:35:31,080 --> 00:35:37,000 |
|
at a text and you see the happy child was smiling |
|
|
|
398 |
|
00:35:37,000 --> 00:35:41,900 |
|
at his mom and started laughing and you know, like |
|
|
|
399 |
|
00:35:41,900 --> 00:35:47,480 |
|
so the words smile, laugh, happy, you know, have |
|
|
|
400 |
|
00:35:47,480 --> 00:35:52,740 |
|
what on us. So we call this tone as happy tone. |
|
|
|
401 |
|
00:35:53,260 --> 00:35:58,500 |
|
cheerful tone. But when we have the crying, the |
|
|
|
402 |
|
00:35:58,500 --> 00:36:02,000 |
|
tears, you know, it is sad. So if you look at the |
|
|
|
403 |
|
00:36:02,000 --> 00:36:06,940 |
|
words in Marlow's poem, the tone of the whole text |
|
|
|
404 |
|
00:36:06,940 --> 00:36:11,420 |
|
is very happy, jovial, cheerful. Look at the |
|
|
|
405 |
|
00:36:11,420 --> 00:36:14,480 |
|
words, the happy, the birds, this way, you know, |
|
|
|
406 |
|
00:36:14,780 --> 00:36:18,360 |
|
the singing of the swains, you know, so the tone |
|
|
|
407 |
|
00:36:18,360 --> 00:36:24,660 |
|
is happy. But in Marlow, The tone is very sad. |
|
|
|
408 |
|
00:36:25,340 --> 00:36:34,240 |
|
Very sad. Okay. The attitude. You know how the |
|
|
|
409 |
|
00:36:34,240 --> 00:36:41,880 |
|
poet feels towards something. How the poet feels |
|
|
|
410 |
|
00:36:41,880 --> 00:36:45,120 |
|
towards something. Like how you feel. When I'm |
|
|
|
411 |
|
00:36:45,120 --> 00:36:48,240 |
|
talking about your attitude, Or when I'm talking |
|
|
|
412 |
|
00:36:48,240 --> 00:36:51,820 |
|
about the attitude, I'm talking about the poet's |
|
|
|
413 |
|
00:36:51,820 --> 00:36:56,360 |
|
attitude, the poet's feelings, view of something. |
|
|
|
414 |
|
00:36:56,660 --> 00:37:03,680 |
|
So if we are looking at the attitude of Marlow, so |
|
|
|
415 |
|
00:37:03,680 --> 00:37:11,040 |
|
he was open, he was optimistic, while Raleigh was |
|
|
|
416 |
|
00:37:11,980 --> 00:37:16,200 |
|
Pessimistic. And you can, I think, demonstrate |
|
|
|
417 |
|
00:37:16,200 --> 00:37:21,680 |
|
that from examples. So here, we have tone and |
|
|
|
418 |
|
00:37:21,680 --> 00:37:29,820 |
|
attitude. You can also compare |
|
|
|
419 |
|
00:37:29,820 --> 00:37:33,800 |
|
the themes. The theme, as we saw in the parody, |
|
|
|
420 |
|
00:37:34,600 --> 00:37:37,880 |
|
one theme was about the immortality, and the other |
|
|
|
421 |
|
00:37:37,880 --> 00:37:42,100 |
|
theme was about immortality. You can talk about |
|
|
|
422 |
|
00:37:42,100 --> 00:37:45,620 |
|
the figures of speech, how the figures of speech |
|
|
|
423 |
|
00:37:45,620 --> 00:37:52,860 |
|
and the images, the images, the figures of speech. |
|
|
|
424 |
|
00:37:53,740 --> 00:37:54,240 |
|
Okay. |
|
|
|
425 |
|
00:37:56,780 --> 00:38:00,120 |
|
Here, like how they were glowing, full of beauty, |
|
|
|
426 |
|
00:38:00,860 --> 00:38:06,240 |
|
but in Marlow, the images are in Raleigh, sorry, |
|
|
|
427 |
|
00:38:06,320 --> 00:38:11,450 |
|
yes. Okay, so you were talking. Good. I think, |
|
|
|
428 |
|
00:38:11,610 --> 00:38:17,230 |
|
yes, here, the images are also different. The |
|
|
|
429 |
|
00:38:17,230 --> 00:38:20,170 |
|
metaphors are different. So most of the metaphors |
|
|
|
430 |
|
00:38:20,170 --> 00:38:25,770 |
|
in Raleigh's poem have to do with death, decay. |
|
|
|
431 |
|
00:38:27,170 --> 00:38:32,050 |
|
Okay, yes. You can talk also... I think this is |
|
|
|
432 |
|
00:38:32,050 --> 00:38:35,430 |
|
when you talk about the style, you know? You can |
|
|
|
433 |
|
00:38:35,430 --> 00:38:40,290 |
|
talk about in the style, the form. the form, the |
|
|
|
434 |
|
00:38:40,290 --> 00:38:45,270 |
|
figures of speech, the language, the sound, the |
|
|
|
435 |
|
00:38:45,270 --> 00:38:45,910 |
|
alliteration. |
|
|
|
436 |
|
00:38:48,430 --> 00:38:53,070 |
|
So the form is the larger category. So let's say |
|
|
|
437 |
|
00:38:53,070 --> 00:38:59,290 |
|
these points you should consider the theme, the |
|
|
|
438 |
|
00:38:59,290 --> 00:39:04,930 |
|
tone, the attitude, and then the style. The style |
|
|
|
439 |
|
00:39:04,930 --> 00:39:10,580 |
|
includes the form, the images, the figures of |
|
|
|
440 |
|
00:39:10,580 --> 00:39:14,740 |
|
speech, the alliteration, the sound, the rhyme and |
|
|
|
441 |
|
00:39:14,740 --> 00:39:20,260 |
|
the rhythm. So I wish you would give me a |
|
|
|
442 |
|
00:39:20,260 --> 00:39:23,800 |
|
masterpiece soon. And if possible, I'll be sending |
|
|
|
443 |
|
00:39:23,800 --> 00:39:28,700 |
|
you a small article about how the parody itself. |
|
|
|
444 |
|
00:39:28,880 --> 00:39:33,060 |
|
This might help you. But please try to distinguish |
|
|
|
445 |
|
00:39:33,060 --> 00:39:37,260 |
|
between a parody and a comparison. In the parody, |
|
|
|
446 |
|
00:39:37,920 --> 00:39:44,300 |
|
I look how you use these words. If you say this |
|
|
|
447 |
|
00:39:44,300 --> 00:39:47,280 |
|
poem is lovely or the other, you're not writing it |
|
|
|
448 |
|
00:39:47,280 --> 00:39:49,220 |
|
or you're not speaking about the parody, but you |
|
|
|
449 |
|
00:39:49,220 --> 00:39:53,220 |
|
are comparing and contrasting. So I think this is |
|
|
|
450 |
|
00:39:53,220 --> 00:39:56,560 |
|
enough for today. If you have any question, let me |
|
|
|
451 |
|
00:39:56,560 --> 00:40:02,660 |
|
know, please. No questions. Today, I know I forgot |
|
|
|
452 |
|
00:40:02,660 --> 00:40:07,020 |
|
the report, but it doesn't mean that, I don't know |
|
|
|
453 |
|
00:40:07,020 --> 00:40:10,380 |
|
how I forgot the report. So let's do it like this |
|
|
|
454 |
|
00:40:10,380 --> 00:40:13,160 |
|
time differently. We need somebody to read her |
|
|
|
455 |
|
00:40:13,160 --> 00:40:16,740 |
|
report now. If anybody is willing to read her |
|
|
|
456 |
|
00:40:16,740 --> 00:40:21,940 |
|
report, it would be funny. Is anybody willing? |
|
|
|
457 |
|
00:40:23,300 --> 00:40:23,920 |
|
Yes. Okay. |
|
|
|
458 |
|
00:40:27,160 --> 00:40:31,480 |
|
So this is a deviation from the norm. We are |
|
|
|
459 |
|
00:40:31,480 --> 00:40:35,360 |
|
deviating from the norm. Every time we're having |
|
|
|
460 |
|
00:40:35,360 --> 00:40:38,640 |
|
the report, At the beginning, now let's see the |
|
|
|
461 |
|
00:40:38,640 --> 00:40:44,020 |
|
report at the end. Daily Report. When I wrote my |
|
|
|
462 |
|
00:40:44,020 --> 00:40:47,840 |
|
daily report, I feel confused. That because when I |
|
|
|
463 |
|
00:40:47,840 --> 00:40:51,160 |
|
wrote it, I measure myself walking in a long road. |
|
|
|
464 |
|
00:40:51,480 --> 00:40:55,280 |
|
I mean, I find many difficulties when writing it |
|
|
|
465 |
|
00:40:55,280 --> 00:40:58,360 |
|
because it is a kind of brainstorming and needs |
|
|
|
466 |
|
00:40:58,360 --> 00:41:01,720 |
|
serious thinking a little bit. However, I like |
|
|
|
467 |
|
00:41:01,720 --> 00:41:05,680 |
|
this task because I discovered that it has special |
|
|
|
468 |
|
00:41:05,680 --> 00:41:09,220 |
|
taste. And also because I hate the method of |
|
|
|
469 |
|
00:41:09,220 --> 00:41:13,070 |
|
cutting based. Regarding to the previous lecture, |
|
|
|
470 |
|
00:41:13,310 --> 00:41:15,710 |
|
it was like something has a special sight of |
|
|
|
471 |
|
00:41:15,710 --> 00:41:20,970 |
|
beauty. That because we began the lecture by |
|
|
|
472 |
|
00:41:20,970 --> 00:41:24,110 |
|
saying the report and then students said her |
|
|
|
473 |
|
00:41:24,110 --> 00:41:27,790 |
|
response which was beautiful and funny. Then Mr. |
|
|
|
474 |
|
00:41:27,850 --> 00:41:31,210 |
|
Habib asked several questions and gave us many |
|
|
|
475 |
|
00:41:31,210 --> 00:41:34,530 |
|
chances to think deeply, so we began to understand |
|
|
|
476 |
|
00:41:34,530 --> 00:41:38,360 |
|
the poem and think seriously. After that, the |
|
|
|
477 |
|
00:41:38,360 --> 00:41:42,040 |
|
teacher thanked us because of our efforts. Also, |
|
|
|
478 |
|
00:41:42,140 --> 00:41:44,980 |
|
he motivated and encouraged us by saying you |
|
|
|
479 |
|
00:41:44,980 --> 00:41:47,820 |
|
should always follow this method. In short, the |
|
|
|
480 |
|
00:41:47,820 --> 00:41:51,420 |
|
lecture was so amazing and nice that we felt |
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|
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481 |
|
00:41:51,420 --> 00:41:55,580 |
|
excited and did not feel in that period of that |
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482 |
|
00:41:55,580 --> 00:41:57,980 |
|
time. Okay, thank you very much. Do you want like |
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483 |
|
00:41:57,980 --> 00:42:03,260 |
|
to read yours? Okay. Is anybody willing? Yes? |
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484 |
|
00:42:03,360 --> 00:42:03,600 |
|
Okay. |
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|
485 |
|
00:42:09,480 --> 00:42:13,800 |
|
At night, when I came to write my daily report, at |
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|
486 |
|
00:42:13,800 --> 00:42:18,360 |
|
night, when I came to write my daily report, I |
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|
487 |
|
00:42:18,360 --> 00:42:20,680 |
|
decided to write about what happened in Arab world |
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|
|
488 |
|
00:42:20,680 --> 00:42:23,700 |
|
last week. As a Palestinian people, we hadn't |
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489 |
|
00:42:23,700 --> 00:42:26,400 |
|
heard on the following news for a long time. But |
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|
490 |
|
00:42:26,400 --> 00:42:30,880 |
|
when the exchange prisoner deal achieved between |
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|
491 |
|
00:42:30,880 --> 00:42:35,140 |
|
Hamas and Israel government with Egyptian eye, |
|
|
|
492 |
|
00:42:35,900 --> 00:42:40,160 |
|
mediation with Egyptian mediation. The Palestinian |
|
|
|
493 |
|
00:42:40,160 --> 00:42:45,400 |
|
city had celebrated in the national wedding a |
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494 |
|
00:42:45,400 --> 00:42:48,520 |
|
request to release about more than 1,000 |
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|
495 |
|
00:42:48,520 --> 00:42:51,200 |
|
Palestinian prisoners of the Israeli prisons. |
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|
496 |
|
00:42:52,680 --> 00:42:57,500 |
|
Through this happy news, the education minister |
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|
497 |
|
00:42:57,500 --> 00:43:01,220 |
|
and others announced a vacation of three days. |
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|
498 |
|
00:43:01,960 --> 00:43:05,020 |
|
Also, among this happy news, we hear the falling |
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|
499 |
|
00:43:05,020 --> 00:43:09,920 |
|
of Gaddafi's body and his guards among the Libyan |
|
|
|
500 |
|
00:43:09,920 --> 00:43:13,540 |
|
rebels. And we hope to listen more, more happy |
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|
501 |
|
00:43:13,540 --> 00:43:16,240 |
|
news. Yeah, and Gaddafi has to do with Raleigh |
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|
502 |
|
00:43:16,240 --> 00:43:18,980 |
|
because, you know, Gaddafi thought, like Marlow, |
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503 |
|
00:43:19,060 --> 00:43:24,320 |
|
that life and palaces will remain forever. You |
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|
504 |
|
00:43:24,320 --> 00:43:29,220 |
|
know, yesterday I read an article, من القصر إلى |
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505 |
|
00:43:29,220 --> 00:43:34,740 |
|
السرداب إلى القبر. So I changed it in my mind, من |
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|
506 |
|
00:43:34,740 --> 00:43:39,640 |
|
القصر إلى الوكر ثم القبر. Because this is how it |
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|
507 |
|
00:43:39,640 --> 00:43:44,440 |
|
should be like this. And we hope to listen more |
|
|
|
508 |
|
00:43:44,440 --> 00:43:46,760 |
|
happy news about the Arab leaders following |
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|
|
509 |
|
00:43:46,760 --> 00:43:50,900 |
|
scenario in Arab Spring Revolution. |
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|
|
510 |
|
00:43:54,030 --> 00:43:57,590 |
|
Although the winter season will soon, the spring |
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|
511 |
|
00:43:57,590 --> 00:44:00,730 |
|
revolution will continue. In the other hand, about |
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|
512 |
|
00:44:00,730 --> 00:44:03,210 |
|
pottery class, last class we started a new poem |
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|
513 |
|
00:44:03,210 --> 00:44:06,810 |
|
for Dari. Yes, and we finished it today. Thank you |
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|
514 |
|
00:44:06,810 --> 00:44:09,470 |
|
very much. Good. Thank you and take care. Okay, |
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|
515 |
|
00:44:10,190 --> 00:44:11,590 |
|
see you next time, Inshallah. |
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