FoxTrot Classics by Bill Amend for May 29, 2009
Transcript:
1. Compare and contrast "Keats' Ode to a Nightingale" with Byron Don Juan. 4. Compare and contrast Blake's "Song of Experience" with Wordsworth's "The Prelude." 15. Compare and contrast Shelly's "Ode to the West Wind" with his earlier "Ozymandias." Peter: Remember when you read us that one poem that said that "less is more"? Teacher: I see you at least answered the questions labeled "your name" and "today's date."
dhubb over 15 years ago
I love how the mouth is drawn in this one, it expresses his feelings better than anything else could have. I would have only gotten the name and date questions as well.
ozzimandius over 15 years ago
how can any one not recognize the clasic Ozzimandius???
LibrarianInTraining over 15 years ago
Hey, Oz!
Yeah, that was a good poem. I liked Ode to the West Wind too though. To A Skylark was nice too.
My absolute favorite has t o be Love’s Philosophy, though.
Makes you wonder how such a romantic writer could be married to the author of Frankenstein.
lewisbower over 15 years ago
He and she were at a 3 month long orgy with Byron and his sister on Lake Greneva when she wrote Frankenstein.
auricle over 15 years ago
I remember having to do this stuff. While reading all those stories, plays, and books was cool, I don’t see how the compare-and-contrast assignments helped for later-in-life. I still enjoy reading, but probably despite schoolwork like this.
kfaatz925 over 15 years ago
I dunno. For me it was always a cool brain exercise, but then English was my favorite subject.
mbne08 over 15 years ago
Rain check please…. Mind hurts now…
Benedick over 15 years ago
Good strategy, Pete.
yyyguy over 15 years ago
in one of my English classes, the teacher would wake me, i’d answer the question, and he’d let me go back to sleep. i introduced him to my Mom as “Stretcho”, and when she expressed her incredulity, he just replied, “I’ve been called worse.” always appreciated his style, and am still never without a book in hand. (just never really got into poetry)
Sternvogel over 15 years ago
At least Peter remembered a snippet of “Andrea del Sarto”:
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/andrea-del-sarto/
LibrarianInTraining over 15 years ago
Lew, yes I knew that. The four of them had a bet on who could write the scariest tale by the end of the trip. Mary won.
mrprongs over 15 years ago
Ozzimandius, you’d be surprised how many people never learn about Ozzimandius. If not for the Watchmen movie, I’d never have checked it out online.
Richard Howland-Bolton Premium Member over 15 years ago
Then there’s always Shelley’s Elephantmandias
I met a traveler from an antique land Who said “Two vast and legless trunks of stone Stand in the forest… Nearby on a pedestal these words appear — ‘My name is Babar, King of Kings , look on My works Ye mighty and despair.’”
http://howlandbolton.com/essays/read_more.php?sid=83
dxjohncenacaz over 8 years ago
I was about to actually answer those questions down here until I found out that they were poems and not songs…