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AP English Literature and Composition Videos 75 videos

AP English Literature and Composition 1.2 Passage Drill 4
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AP English Literature and Composition 1.2 Passage Drill 4. As which of the following is the object being personified?

AP English Literature and Composition 1.4 Passage Drill 3
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AP English Literature and Composition 1.4 Passage Drill 3. How is Burne's view of pacifism best characterized in lines 57 through 67?

AP English Literature and Composition 1.6 Passage Drill 5
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AP English Literature and Composition 1.6 Passage Drill 5. Death is primarily characterized as what?

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AP English Literature and Composition 1.7 Passage Drill 4 251 Views


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AP English Literature and Composition 1.7 Passage Drill 4. The ongoing emphasis on vegetation and nature in the poem classifies it as which of the following styles?

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English Language

Transcript

00:03

Here's your shmoop du jour, brought to you by Sacrifice. We know how much you value your

00:09

free time, but surely you can sacrifice a few hours to come kill some cows with us and

00:14

offer them to the god of ground beef.

00:24

The ongoing emphasis on vegetation and nature in the poem classifies it as which of the

00:30

following styles?

00:32

And here are the potential answers...

00:38

Okay, so... the author doesn't come right out and tell us about his personal dietary

00:41

habits, but we have a feeling he downs his fair share of soy patties and wheatgrass shakes.

00:47

It's all "leaf-fringed" this and "trodden weed" that. This guy definitely has Mother

00:51

Nature on the mind.

00:54

This question wants to know... how does this emphasis on all things veggie...classify the poem?

01:01

We've heard of poetic feet... but apparently this one also has a green thumb...

01:04

Well, it really just comes down to vocab.

01:07

We can probably eliminate C -- Environmental... because it seems like a bit of a decoy answer.

01:13

Yes, when one talks about nature they're talking about our environment... but is that really

01:17

a style of poetry? Nah -- scratch it.

01:22

We can also skip D -- we KNOW this poem is an ode because it's right in the title...

01:27

but does an ode necessarily have anything to do with nature?

01:31

Nope. Moving on.

01:33

E is a no-go as well. A "lyric" poem is just another type, like an "ode," and has nothing

01:39

to do with nature.

01:41

If we weren't sure, we could think about songs that people refer to as "lyrical"... it has

01:45

more to do with a piece's meter and rhythm than with its content...

01:49

So we're down to either A "Idyllic," or B "Pastoral."

01:53

Both mean roughly the same thing... and here's where we have to fall back on our knowledge

01:57

of terminology.

01:58

The technical, official term for a poetry centering on nature is "pastoral."

02:04

So B it is.

02:06

As in, "Buckwheat tofu muffins."

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