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AP English Language and Composition 1.2 Passage Drill
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AP English Language and Composition: Passage Drill Drill 1, Problem 2. What is the speaker's primary purpose in using onomatopoeia in line four?

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AP English Language and Composition 1.8 Passage Drill
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AP English Language and Composition: Passage Drill 1, Problem 8. The quotation marks in the third paragraph chiefly serve to what?

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AP English Language and Composition 6.4 Passage Drill 221 Views


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Description:

AP English Language and Composition 6.4 Passage Drill. The author closely associates "dictation" with what?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

[ musical flourish ]

00:03

And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by spirit ditties.

00:07

Just wait and see. You'll have so much more time

00:09

to dance, play, and sing after you're dead.

00:11

Okay, read it.

00:13

Weep.

00:16

And here we go. Lines 21 through 24 imply that...

00:20

what?

00:21

And here are the potential answers.

00:23

All right. Pause waiver thingy. Yeah, you gotta read it.

00:26

We gotta give it.

00:27

Once again, we're being asked to zero in on a few particular lines

00:31

and try to decipher their meaning.

00:32

We'll have to get deep inside the writer's head.

00:34

[ noo ]

00:35

Okay, here are the lines in question. Ready?

00:38

"Ah, happy, happy boughs! that cannot shed

00:40

Your leaves, nor ever bid the Spring adieu;

00:44

And, happy melodist, unwearied

00:47

For ever piping songs for ever new..."

00:50

All right. So we start out talking about tree boughs that

00:53

never shed leaves.

00:55

Uh... Somewhere where it's always spring.

00:57

Well, how about South Florida?

00:59

Oh, wait. Actually, because we're studying scenery on the side

01:02

of an urn, that would make sense.

01:05

The trees painted onto it would never lose their leaves

01:07

and the season would never change.

01:09

Does that work with the last two lines?

01:12

"...happy melodist, unwearied"?

01:14

Huh. Okay, so this melodist guy never gets tired,

01:17

and is forever playing songs on his pipe.

01:20

Either he is really hard up for the cash and can't afford

01:22

to take breaks, or, yeah, he's also frozen in time

01:26

on the urn.

01:27

So it seems these lines are all about how nice and happy and beautiful it is

01:31

that these pleasant scenes are forever preserved on the urn.

01:34

We never have to see the tree lose its leaves

01:36

or the melodist, you know, take five.

01:40

Looking over our answer choices, C looks like a pretty clear winner here.

01:43

The speaker envies the stillness of time in the urn.

01:47

So, boom, we're done.

01:49

Play us out, melodist.

01:50

[ upbeat music ]

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