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Understanding Poetry - Dead poets society

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    Gentleman open your texts
    to page 21 of the introduction
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    Mr. Perry, would you read the opening
    paragraph of the preface
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    entitled understanding poetry
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    Understanding Poetry by
    Dr. J. Evans Pritchard, PhD
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    Before we understand poetry
    we must first be fluent with
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    its meter, rhyme and figures of speech,
    then ask two questions,
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    One, how artfully has the objective
    of the poem been rendered
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    and two, how important is that objective.
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    Question one rates the poem's perfection
    question two rates its importance.
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    And once these questions have been answered,
    determining the poem's greatness
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    becomes a relatively simple matter.
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    If the poem's score for perfection
    is plotted on the horizontal of the graph
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    and its importance
    is plotted on the vertical,
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    then calculating the total area of the
    poem yields the measure of its greatness
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    A sonnet by Byron might score high on the
    vertical, but only average on the horizontal
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    A Shakesperian sonnet, on the other hand,
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    would score high both
    horizontally and vertically
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    yielding a massive total area, thereby
    revealing the poem to be truly great.
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    As you can see through the
    poetry in this book,
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    practice this rating method. As your ability
    to evaluate poems in this manner grows,
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    so will your enjoyment
    and understanding of poetry.
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    Excrement.
    (dramatic pause)
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    That's what I think of
    Mr. J. Evans Prichard.
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    We're not laying pipe,
    we're talking about poetry.
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    How can you describe poetry
    like American Band Stand?
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    Well, I like Byron, I give him a 42,
    but I can't dance to it. (laughter)
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    Now I want you to rip out that page.
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    Go on, rip out the entire page.
    You heard me, rip it out.
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    RIP IT OUT!
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    Go on, rip it out!
    Thank you Mr. Dalton.
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    Gentleman, I'll tell you what
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    don't just rip out that page,
    tear out the entire introduction.
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    I want it gone, history
    leave nothing of it.
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    Rip it Out, RIP!
    (sounds of paper ripping)
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    Be gone J. Evans Pritchard, PhD.
    Rip, shred, tear, rip it out!
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    I want to hear nothing but ripping
    of Mr. Pritchard.
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    We'll perforate it, put it on a roll.
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    It's not the bible,
    you're not going to go to hell for this.
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    (sound of paper ripping and laughter)
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    Make a clean tear,
    I want nothing left of this.
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    (whispering) We shouldn't be doing this
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    Rip! Rip!
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    Rip it Out! Rip!
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    (sound of ripping paper)
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    What the hell is going on here!
    (paper ripping stops)
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    I don't hear enough rips!
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    - Mr. Keating
    - Mr. McAllister
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    (dramatic pause)
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    I'm sorry I, I didn't know you were here.
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    - I am.
    - Well, so you are. Excuse me.
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    Keep ripping gentleman!
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    This is a battle, a war,
    and the casualties could...
Title:
Understanding Poetry - Dead poets society
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
03:33

English subtitles

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