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- [Instructor] Hello, readers.
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Let's talk about poems.
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Poetry is a special kind of writing.
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If ordinary writing is like talking,
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then poetry is like singing.
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Poetry is a way of
making art with language.
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Poems can express huge ideas or feelings.
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They can be about the sound
or rhythm of language,
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or they can be goofy, little jokes.
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It's like any other kind of writing.
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Poems can be about everything
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or they can be about nothing at all.
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They can be funny, or sad, or sweet.
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They can rhyme.
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They can very much not rhyme.
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And all of that is, in my
opinion, absolutely wonderful.
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I think of some poems as condensed ideas
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that contain a lot of ideas
in small amounts of text.
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So every word matters a lot.
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There's a little light
bulbs representing ideas.
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So I'm gonna look at a
couple of poems today
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in order to describe some parts of a poem.
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Let's begin with the poem "Cat"
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by Marilyn Singer.
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It goes like this.
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Cat.
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I prefer warm fur, a perfect fire
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to lie beside a cozy lap,
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where I can nap,
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an empty chair when she's not there.
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I want heat on my feet,
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on my nose, on my hide.
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No cat I remember
dislikes December inside.
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So the person who wrote this poem,
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Marilyn singer, is the poet for stories.
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The person who writes
the poem is an author,
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but for poems, the writer is a poet,
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but who is telling the poem?
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Who's speaking?
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The person whose voice we
hear in a poem is called
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the speaker, which is another
thing I like about poetry.
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When you're having trouble
understanding a poem,
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read it aloud.
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Part of the pleasure of poetry
for me is hearing the words
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bounce around as you say them.
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And then this poem,
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I'm pretty sure the speaker is a cat.
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Now you'll notice there
are only three sentences
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in this poem, but they're
separated into 15 lines.
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You can see these lines
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have anywhere from one
to four words in them.
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Lines can be as long or
as short as a poet likes,
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but here the poet is creating
these line breaks to indicate
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pauses and rhythms, right?
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Like normally we wouldn't
start a new line here,
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if this were prose,
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which is what we call all
other forms of writing.
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Prose uses normal sentences
and paragraphs, right?
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The poet is choosing to create line breaks
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in order to change the way the sentence
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or the line looks on the page.
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Poetry is not just about how it sounds.
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Sometimes it's about how
it looks as it's written.
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Now, in addition,
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the poet is also using spaces
to scoot these three phrases
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over as well as this word inside.
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The words themselves are scooted in.
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They're curled up and feeling
cozy, like a cat by a fire
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in the middle of December.
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You'll also notice that some
but not all of the lines
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rhyme with each other.
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And let's take a moment
to think for a second.
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What is rhyming really?
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One way to think about it is
when the ending sound of a word
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matches the other ending sound
of a word like lap and nap,
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or when a bunch of sounds match each other
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throughout a pair of words
like remember, and December,
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I want to be super clear about this part
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because I was already out of high school
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before I learned this thing,
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but poems don't have to rhyme.
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They can, but they
definitely don't have to.
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I have one more poem
part to describe to you.
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And to do it, I wanna use
Billy Collins poem "Litany"
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which sounds like a fancy poem at first,
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but then becomes much more conversational.
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I'll end by reading the
first three stanzas,
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which are these paragraph looking things.
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Not all poems are broken into
stanzas, but this one is.
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So those are some parts of the poem.
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To review, a poet writes lines.
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The place where each line
ends is called a line break
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and a group of lines
together in a paragraph
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is called a stanza.
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The voice that tells us the poem,
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the poem's narrator is called the speaker.
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Some poems rhyme, others don't.
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Cool.
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Here's a snippet of
"Litany" by Billy Collins.
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Litany.
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You are the bread and the knife,
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the crystal goblet and the wine.
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You are the dew on the morning grass
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and the burning wheel of the sun.
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You are the white apron of the baker
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and the marsh birds suddenly in flight.
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However, you are not
the wind in the orchard,
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the plums on the counter,
or the house of cards.
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And you are certainly
not the pine scented air.
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There is just no way that
you are the pine-scented air.
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It is possible that you are
the fish under the bridge.
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Maybe even the pigeon
on the General's head,
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but you are not even close
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to being the field of
corn flowers at dusk.
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There's more, but I'd love
it if you looked it up
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and read it aloud yourself.
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You can learn anything. David out.