Time stamps ~ 4:50 key themes and ideas 5:29 Romanticism summary 8:03 overview surrounding the poem 11:23 form 16:28 structure 17:48 language looking through the whole extract 40:45 the ending message
Watching this again after my GCSE’s last month, as I’ve been given the opportunity to teach a year 10 class for work experience. I wouldn’t be able to do all this without you, so thank you Mr Bruff!
someone in my class asked my teacher would the people at the times actually get any of this and she was like honestly probably not but we have to imagine they did😂
if you don't have enough time and you are looking for something more specific. Here you go: about the author: 1:00 summary of the story: 9:00 form: 9:00 and 11:22 context: 12:12 structure: 16:28 theme: 29:11 going over the whole poem and doing language, structural analysis and also talks about context: 17:49 (sorry if the last bit wasn't specific enough i didn't have enough time either)
I've always despised this poem as i thought it was really dull but you've completely changed my opinion , I didn't realise there was so much you could analyse ! thanks so much
I think watching this video in 1.75x actually made me appreciate this poem a lot more, when listening at such speed, we pay more attention to what it being said so we don't miss out any important information, and by doing so, I understood the poem and its meaning. Thank you Mr.Bruff.
As a trainee teacher, these explanation and analysis videos are superb for grasping an overview before exploring the poetry with a class. I also recommend students seek out your videos if they want a complete and thorough understanding; offering more in depth analysis than we can get through in a classroom.
hi Mr Bruff i have an exam coming up on the comparison of this poem and storm on the island, is there any significant similarities or differences that you can spot in these two poems? I can only think of the similarites/differences between the poems' uses of language, but kinda struggling on the structure and context. Thx anyway, this video is very helpful, hope u can reach 1 million subs soon. ^_^
I saw a comment saying that you should watch it at 1.25x the speed, and I'd just like to add onto that, because yeah, it's actually super helpful for speed revision. To actually speed to video up, you want to go into the video settings (the gear on laptop/desktop or three dots on mobile), speed, and choose what you want. 1.25x speed just to get it over quicker is easy to understand still, 1.5x speed for those of you in a rush, or, if you're used to watching fast videos, it's completely possible to understand 2x perfectly if you're used to it or use subtitles for help and get the video and notes done in less than 2 hours (personally it took me ~1 hour 15 mins). GOOD LUCK EVERYONE!
This is fabulous! You have enhanced my understanding of this poem tenfold without me having to do the the 15 hours of research I would normally have to have done! Huge thanks!
I have just moved schools a few months ago in the middle of my GCSE and was studying love and relationships and now I have to do power and conflict and your channel helps me so much thank you!
The fact that it is written in blank verse also reflects on how Wordsworth felt as a young boy rowing through the lake. It wasn’t predictable, he didn’t know what was going to happen next. Much like the lack of Rhyme Scheme. It is not the same it is different and unknown to the reader.
Just wondering could the idea of referencing to nature as 'her' emphasise a link to religion as in greek mythology nature is viewed as feminine due to the goddess gaia (gaea) or 'the idea of'mother nature' as this was still widely believed during the 18th century?
I was thinking that too. Also, nature is portrayed as a force that nurtures and provides for life (seen in the extract by how it leads him, and how the mooring place belongs to "her" so it's as if nature has provided a safe place for the boat through the willow tree) which also links into ideas of femininity, as women are given the role of nurturing children.
I apologise if this is wrong but while listening and taking notes I came up wih a few ideas for certain parts of the poem and wondered if they could be considered correct: 1. Lines 22-24 when talking about the lack of personification. As described, the lack of personification shows the loss of power and lack of power of man. Could it also be said that the lack of personification is to show how he can no longer describe what he sees as he cannot comprehend it and it could show how little he really does know about nature. It could show how he has been molded by society to believe the limitations and powerlessness of nature and how he has just realised how wrong this is. The way he describes everything he does earlier on in certainty and arrogance could contrast with how he is unable to confidently describe what is before him due to his fear. 2.Lines 30-31. When talking about Steal and Stealth. I saw this as the use of stealth emphasising his pride and arrogance hiding the fact that he stole the boat but then once he gets back after being scared and intimidated by nature, he realises what he has done wrong and this could show how he is beginning to open his eyes to the bigger picture of nature and how powerless he is compared to nature. These are worded badly but I would love to know what anyone thinks
I was going to compare it to exposure as they both focus on the power of nature, but potentially also Remains as it deals with how a single event in your life can have a huge impact on how you view the world:) Hope this helps - I loved your analysis by the way!
Thank you for this video! I am revising poetry by watching these full analysis videos and making notes on flash cards. You really helped me understand The Prelude, The Emigree and Tissue which I didn’t really understand before
I came across this video as I'm doing summer revision , I have to revise the poems of the cluster power and conflict sector and the video you've uploaded has tremendously helped. Thanks for the upload as the great notes . Hope to do all of them from these .
Thank you. Your hard work is very much appreciated by myself. Got through the whole video and made annotations. Just have to try and memorise the key bits now :).
i've just finished watching this and it helped sooo much,thanx for that. Also i thought of a point while watching this alot of the themes abandon him and so you could llink in context with this and the quote 'unloosed her chain' could suggest freedom for him too. good luck everyone:)
Thank you once again for your fantastic videos. I have used them for extra learning/revision to help with my upcoming exam and have recommended them also! 👍🏾
Thank you so much Mr Bruff! I’ve recently started in the English dept taking intervention groups for GCSE. I’ve lost count of the positive comments among the staff whenever I mention your name! Your 12 to 15 hours certainly pays off (and yes, I have bought your e-books too 😜👍🏼) - Peta
My gcse's are coming soon and I'm watching all your videos on the poems and you're honestly a great teacher and make so many valid points which no one would even think about. THANK YOU
@mrbruff could the blackening mountain symbolism how city life(industrial revolution) has bought damage to nature which angers the mountain to be furious at Wordsworth as human society has already done enough to nature
Thank you so much for this! I am a year 10 student who's teacher really isn't great (she doesn't know what a metaphor is to begin with😂) anyways we just "covered" this poem and with her very little knowledge I really didn't get it, now I'm starting to understand it a lot better! I just made 4 pages of notes and hope it pays off and helps me progress in this section of English literature as I really want to secure a good grade next year in my GCSE's. Just thought I'd add an analysis I think is quite important you missed out, the use of oxymoron on line 6 "troubled pleasure" could hint at the narrators guilt for stealing the boat. Just thought that was quite a nice language point to pick out, anyways thanks once again for this and I hope to buy your e book soon as I literally find myself teaching myself everything in my English lessons😂
mrbruff no problem :) I hope to eventually watch all your power & conflict poem videos and also any to do with: The Inspector calls, a Christmas carol and Romeo and Juliet you may have :)
I went into this video the extract from Prelude being my least favorite poem in the anthology (mostly because of my lack of understanding) but now it's genuinely one of my favorites. I swear your videos are going to save my GCSE. Thank you so much, your channel is so helpful!
I also feel like when he says "with trebling oars I turned" he is diverting focus on his anxiousness that is made visible by his shaky hands, he doesn't want to accept his fear of nature and the impact it has had on him physically so therefore diverts the focus and attention to the oars, as he feels as if his pride is being challenged.
I have my literature exam tomorrow and I still don't know what's going on in this poem. However, your video has really helped me to understand it.Thank you so much!!
Before I watched this video I didn't understand the prelude at all, but now I do and this analysis is amazing! Thank you so much for making it easier for me to understand! 👌🏽
On the topic of repeating "no" (41:59), another interpretation of it could be that he is repeating the various ways in which there is no colour or light in his world. There are no "pleasant images" or "colours of green fields", linking back to the "darkness" he feels. This darkness acts as a metaphor for how he has been left in the dark after having his ignorance and naivety revealed.
Paragraph that I made using one of Mr. Bruff's first points on Language (would be great if you could feedback just wanna know what I can improve) When the young Wordsworth takes the “boat tied to a willow tree”, it is described as an “act of stealth”. This shows that he is sneaky and sly, and shows that he has no care for the consequences for his actions. This prideful attitude is repeated in the poem when the boy feels “proud of his skill” with the boat. The repeated use of this prideful attitude may show the poet’s representation of not only this child but society as whole, and possibly that society feels they are superior to nature, which can be seen with the glorified noun “skill”, and that it can take away from nature what it wants without fear of consequences. However, the arrogant imagery of the boy is halted when he sees the mountain. It is described as “a huge peak, black and huge”. The use of a basic word, “huge”, and the repetition of it shows how speechless the child is when seeing the full power of nature. As a Romantic, Wordsworth may have been trying to emphasize something precious and far more powerful than humans and used the little boy’s naiveness as a satirical attack on the self-absorbed nature of society. The reader may feel empathy towards the child but also admire the effect that nature had on him.
'towered up between me and the stars'-the tower is a metaphorical wall, the fact that it is metaphorical means that it can be broken, it shows how man always breaks the boundaries. Walls are also a form of protection, man is complacent even though nature is like a 'mother'
I got your copy for the translation for Romeo and Juliet for the Junior Cert. you have helped me a lot, thank you 🥰 You are the main reason I was able to answer the Romeo and Juliet question in the paper as I had an issue understanding the Shakespearean language. Every time when studying and had an issue with the language I would open it up to help me out ❤️
Thank you so much for this, I just hope I'm able to remember the quotes and compare the right poems. For my mock I did the other week, I think I did good at the poetry, thanks to you! I get my results on Friday I think. Thank you for all these videos! Defiantly helped me understood all the poems. Thank you :)
The young Williams’ feeling of superiority is ironic considering he was well in touch with nature and knows the fragility of existence as his parents are both dead.
Through subverting the typical SVO sentence structure - ie by spreading it across 4 lines from "When" to "Upreared its head" - Wordsworth highlights how difficult he as a child has found this situation. The long winded subverted, sentence form represents how he struggles to comprehend the hidden "peak"; the pride he feels throughout the extract until now represents the power man feels it has, but at this moment Wordsworth comes to the realisation that nature is the one with true power. Moreover, the fact that this sentence is replete with enjambment could suggest that this view runs through society linking to another of his ideas that man is arrogant with its supposed power. Finally, to complete this sentence, he leaves us with the personification found in "upreared its head": by leaving the sentence on this note, he almost metaphorically says that nature will have the last laugh, that although we as a species believe we are truly powerful, a divine omnipotent force dictates the ways of the world not us - the divine side associated with this analysis links to the ideology Wordsworth would have followed as it is an integral part of creating an epic poem.
Sat down with my anthology and wrote out a lot of good annotations another two pages full! Helped to inspire a lot of my own interpretations too thank you!!
You said in the video that you would link the artice about the Freudian approach to the poem, but I cant find it in the description? I'd quite like to have an alternative interpretation so could you find the link if you still have it from your research? Great video, worth the two hours I spent watching it 😊 👍
my heart melted when he said he took 15 hours to prepare for this
@Universal - Mobile Gaming loool 😂😂
@Universal - Mobile Gaming bruh
15 hours ... lol he loves his job
Universal - Mobile Gaming simp
@@user-qp6ts2dp5g So i can safely say ur parents r simps
Time stamps ~
4:50 key themes and ideas
5:29 Romanticism summary
8:03 overview surrounding the poem
11:23 form
16:28 structure
17:48 language looking through the whole extract
40:45 the ending message
LEGEND X
the king that we need but dont deserve
thankyou omg ive got to do this foe english during isolation hahah,life saver!!
Absolute GENIUS!
You life saver THANK YOUUU!!
If you're doing speed revision tonight, you can still understand every word perfectly at 1.25x the speed ;)
Im doing it as 2x
We're dead help us
Charlotte Jefferies how do you speed up videos
Mr small 8 it only works on a laptop/ computer but hit the little settings button in the corner
This is the best advice ive ever seen
Watching this again after my GCSE’s last month, as I’ve been given the opportunity to teach a year 10 class for work experience. I wouldn’t be able to do all this without you, so thank you Mr Bruff!
Brilliant!
OH REALLLLLLLLLLLLY
@@mrbruff the teacher of teachers
english sucks
35:27-35:29 Mr Bruff reveals his true identity as a squid.
hahahaha
i thought someone would comment about it
i literally paused it to just to look at the comments
it was funny ha ha ha
loooool
Shhh spoilers
Penguinator 😂😂😂
could you please at the end of every poem anylsis pick out 3 quotes to remember for the actual test . That would be really goood tbh
Hi Kainaat, So you are Alishba Jahangir's sister... now I know!
@@jalajarora2331 wnna fight ??
Put adverts on these videos at least, you deserve the money.
+LK I do
@@mrbruff tru
I swear down English is pure waffle
Diflay I have my English lit tomorrow on poetry and inspector calls 😵
Boris Johnson must've passed with flying colours
someone in my class asked my teacher would the people at the times actually get any of this and she was like honestly probably not but we have to imagine they did😂
Lmaoo true
facts
ive been studying for 4 hours straight and watching so many videos.. i hate the new gcses
if you don't have enough time and you are looking for something more specific. Here you go:
about the author: 1:00
summary of the story: 9:00
form: 9:00 and 11:22
context: 12:12
structure: 16:28
theme: 29:11
going over the whole poem and doing language, structural analysis and also talks about context: 17:49
(sorry if the last bit wasn't specific enough i didn't have enough time either)
ik this is 4 years ago but i love you for this i cba watching allat
I've always despised this poem as i thought it was really dull but you've completely changed my opinion , I didn't realise there was so much you could analyse ! thanks so much
that is brilliant!
I'm the same; I always dreaded having to write about "The Prelude" but I now hope that it comes up in the exam!
If this "poem" comes up in the exam, I'm going to be so pissed.
Steel Xcaliber Could be worse and they give us Tissue or something like that
Steel Xcaliber I hope I have this poem 😂
Rosie Xxx same lol
@@yoshi1625 calling it now it will be tissue
@@joshfx3756 I think it may be prelude
I think watching this video in 1.75x actually made me appreciate this poem a lot more, when listening at such speed, we pay more attention to what it being said so we don't miss out any important information, and by doing so, I understood the poem and its meaning.
Thank you Mr.Bruff.
This man is single handedly saving my whole classes grade for the poetry on English lit 😭
sameeee
Where my 2018 and 2019 g’s at ❤️📝
Right here and fucked
what's upchurch
Hello and good luck
fucked for tomorrow lmao
Here
As a trainee teacher, these explanation and analysis videos are superb for grasping an overview before exploring the poetry with a class. I also recommend students seek out your videos if they want a complete and thorough understanding; offering more in depth analysis than we can get through in a classroom.
Thank you
Thanks a lot. You're an amazing teacher, and a life saver
+Mohammed Hussain yay!
mrbruff thankz
been watching for 25 minutes then realised ive got a different extract from the poem for my exam.......
+Grandpa Arno haha! Brilliant
Grandpa Arno same!!
hi Mr Bruff i have an exam coming up on the comparison of this poem and storm on the island, is there any significant similarities or differences that you can spot in these two poems? I can only think of the similarites/differences between the poems' uses of language, but kinda struggling on the structure and context. Thx anyway, this video is very helpful, hope u can reach 1 million subs soon. ^_^
rip
me too! oops
I saw a comment saying that you should watch it at 1.25x the speed, and I'd just like to add onto that, because yeah, it's actually super helpful for speed revision.
To actually speed to video up, you want to go into the video settings (the gear on laptop/desktop or three dots on mobile), speed, and choose what you want. 1.25x speed just to get it over quicker is easy to understand still, 1.5x speed for those of you in a rush, or, if you're used to watching fast videos, it's completely possible to understand 2x perfectly if you're used to it or use subtitles for help and get the video and notes done in less than 2 hours (personally it took me ~1 hour 15 mins).
GOOD LUCK EVERYONE!
I got my English literature mocks tomorrow and I'm binging loads of your videos for revision. thanks bro your doing God's work
This is fabulous! You have enhanced my understanding of this poem tenfold without me having to do the the 15 hours of research I would normally have to have done! Huge thanks!
+Daisy Gauci great!
2020 people where you at??!
Or is it just me revising early.
I'm using this video to help me on my first essay of the year
chloe. fcxc same I’ve got my mock soon
IM WITH U BRO....NEED THIS TO GET INTO LORETO OR XAVERIAN LOL
Not any more loooool
Hope Seme no ur not
in the space of an hour, the night before the last english exam you've gone from 97k subs to 98k hahaha
I must say, an ‘epic’ analysis! Thank you :)
I have just moved schools a few months ago in the middle of my GCSE and was studying love and relationships and now I have to do power and conflict and your channel helps me so much thank you!
As we enter the GCSE preparation season i am making this comment to commemorate all the pupils who are running to mrbruff to save their GCSE English.
lol too late
I hope I get this one now thank you for our Lord and saviour MR BRUFF, you are saving my GCSE's right now
Once again with 2017 English lit exams in less than month you are a life saver!!
Absolute legend. Thanks for this; your hard work does not go unnoticed, and hopefully I'll do well in my exams in a few months thanks to your help x
Got my exam tomorrow, Mr Bruff you are a legend
I'm here in 2019, just want to say your hard work has really made me confident for my exams so thank you
The fact that it is written in blank verse also reflects on how Wordsworth felt as a young boy rowing through the lake. It wasn’t predictable, he didn’t know what was going to happen next. Much like the lack of Rhyme Scheme. It is not the same it is different and unknown to the reader.
Just wondering could the idea of referencing to nature as 'her' emphasise a link to religion as in greek mythology nature is viewed as feminine due to the goddess gaia (gaea) or 'the idea of'mother nature' as this was still widely believed during the 18th century?
I think so, Wordsworth was a pantheist, which means he believed that God was nature which could be context to back up this idea
I was thinking that too. Also, nature is portrayed as a force that nurtures and provides for life (seen in the extract by how it leads him, and how the mooring place belongs to "her" so it's as if nature has provided a safe place for the boat through the willow tree) which also links into ideas of femininity, as women are given the role of nurturing children.
Caitlyn-Ann ARTS yoooo that’s really good. Thanks for that. If it come up I’m totally going to use it
People like u hurt my head , I don’t understand this level of intelligence like it hurts my head
Sarah Cat n
I apologise if this is wrong but while listening and taking notes I came up wih a few ideas for certain parts of the poem and wondered if they could be considered correct:
1. Lines 22-24 when talking about the lack of personification. As described, the lack of personification shows the loss of power and lack of power of man. Could it also be said that the lack of personification is to show how he can no longer describe what he sees as he cannot comprehend it and it could show how little he really does know about nature. It could show how he has been molded by society to believe the limitations and powerlessness of nature and how he has just realised how wrong this is. The way he describes everything he does earlier on in certainty and arrogance could contrast with how he is unable to confidently describe what is before him due to his fear.
2.Lines 30-31. When talking about Steal and Stealth. I saw this as the use of stealth emphasising his pride and arrogance hiding the fact that he stole the boat but then once he gets back after being scared and intimidated by nature, he realises what he has done wrong and this could show how he is beginning to open his eyes to the bigger picture of nature and how powerless he is compared to nature.
These are worded badly but I would love to know what anyone thinks
+Ebony Egan good ideas!
Thank you!
mrbruff I wondered if you would be able to tell me what poems would be good to compare to extract from The Prelude?
I was going to compare it to exposure as they both focus on the power of nature, but potentially also Remains as it deals with how a single event in your life can have a huge impact on how you view the world:) Hope this helps - I loved your analysis by the way!
Ebony Egan storm on the island
Thank you for this video! I am revising poetry by watching these full analysis videos and making notes on flash cards. You really helped me understand The Prelude, The Emigree and Tissue which I didn’t really understand before
Great!
I love how when he zooms into the words then have quotes and writing in them
I'm now officially saved! Hoping for power of nature tomorrow now, thanks Me Bruff!
Same
I came across this video as I'm doing summer revision , I have to revise the poems of the cluster power and conflict sector and the video you've uploaded has tremendously helped. Thanks for the upload as the great notes . Hope to do all of them from these .
+Samiya Akhtar awesome
Thank you. Your hard work is very much appreciated by myself. Got through the whole video and made annotations. Just have to try and memorise the key bits now :).
+meekyam37 great
i've just finished watching this and it helped sooo much,thanx for that. Also i thought of a point while watching this alot of the themes abandon him and so you could llink in context with this and the quote 'unloosed her chain' could suggest freedom for him too. good luck everyone:)
Thank you for this video, I know you spend a lot of time on it and I just wanted to say I really appreciate it!
please pick the top 3 quotes you would use in the actual exam so we know which quotes are actually the best to analyse and get marks on
Ur cute
words cannot describe how thankful i am for this
No problem!
Thank you once again for your fantastic videos. I have used them for extra learning/revision to help with my upcoming exam and have recommended them also! 👍🏾
This was so helpful ive got my GCSE's coming up and couldnt be more thankful for these videos,THANKYOU so much!!💕
Having to watch this video at 2x speed because the exams tomorrow
Same
what did u get?
@@MI-lo2hj 7
You have actually saved my life, I'm sitting my exam next month and I lost my poetry anthology!!! Thank you Mr Bruff
+Nicole Stephens thanks
Yesss, my grades are saved now. Thank you, this is perfect!
That was so so so goood. I finally learnt something about this poem. At the beginning it was so confusing but now it all makes sense. Thank you.
Paper 2 tomorrow, I know nothing about anything except tissue of all poems, operating off of hopes, dreams, and Mr Bruff rn
how did it go 😊
Great video, in my opinion the best insight into any of these poems. Finally fully understand this poem.
Great!
Yo great poem analysis helping me prepare for my gcse exams next year while on lockdown
I think this must be your best video - keep it up, you're a saviour!
Thank you so much Mr Bruff! I’ve recently started in the English dept taking intervention groups for GCSE. I’ve lost count of the positive comments among the staff whenever I mention your name! Your 12 to 15 hours certainly pays off (and yes, I have bought your e-books too 😜👍🏼) - Peta
+Pottymoon hehe thanks! I really appreciate that :)
Thank you so much for spending so much time in preparation for this video.
I have found all your videos to be excellent and very useful.
Great!
My gcse's are coming soon and I'm watching all your videos on the poems and you're honestly a great teacher and make so many valid points which no one would even think about. THANK YOU
Thank you!
44 mins , this is my homework this is mad !! 😂
+Jake Holmwood imagine how much time it took me to prepare!
+mrbruff you get paid to do it I don't 😂
Get paid? How do I get paid?
Ads
+FutureInnovation do you see an add in the video? I dont. his videos arent monetized he gets no funds from these videos.
wow you're absolutely amazing! thank you ever so much for making these videos, they're a great help!
Thanks
@mrbruff could the blackening mountain symbolism how city life(industrial revolution) has bought damage to nature which angers the mountain to be furious at Wordsworth as human society has already done enough to nature
Haider Yaqub you could say that the city life and Industialisation has blackened and ruined nature
@@Exodus_Instrument lthink thats true
my man thinks this is london with the every blackning church appals cuz
Thank you so much for this! I am a year 10 student who's teacher really isn't great (she doesn't know what a metaphor is to begin with😂) anyways we just "covered" this poem and with her very little knowledge I really didn't get it, now I'm starting to understand it a lot better! I just made 4 pages of notes and hope it pays off and helps me progress in this section of English literature as I really want to secure a good grade next year in my GCSE's. Just thought I'd add an analysis I think is quite important you missed out, the use of oxymoron on line 6 "troubled pleasure" could hint at the narrators guilt for stealing the boat. Just thought that was quite a nice language point to pick out, anyways thanks once again for this and I hope to buy your e book soon as I literally find myself teaching myself everything in my English lessons😂
+Lily Rose thank you for that lovely message!
mrbruff no problem :) I hope to eventually watch all your power & conflict poem videos and also any to do with: The Inspector calls, a Christmas carol and Romeo and Juliet you may have :)
Lily Rose 87 days till the exams start 😂😭
I went into this video the extract from Prelude being my least favorite poem in the anthology (mostly because of my lack of understanding) but now it's genuinely one of my favorites. I swear your videos are going to save my GCSE. Thank you so much, your channel is so helpful!
Same here! It is so much easier to study when you are actually interested by the poem.
Same
Thank you so so much for taking the time and putting in so much effort with these videos! You're a lifesaver!
You're welcome!
DEADEST POEM GOING
Along with tissue and emigree
Joseph Ward they are all dead bruh who reads 10 line poems for fun or cares
@Joseph Ward Screw Gove, I want to see that wanker do an exam paper and see how well he does. Bloody idiot he is
Truest thing I’ve read
Checking out me history is so complicated
from here 2019 I would say a big Thanks for you MR. Bruff, your videos is very helpful.
Great!
as a english education students, studying literature, this is so helpful omg! thank you!
Happy to help!
A very helpful analysis, from someone who was struggling. Thank you.
I also feel like when he says "with trebling oars I turned" he is diverting focus on his anxiousness that is made visible by his shaky hands, he doesn't want to accept his fear of nature and the impact it has had on him physically so therefore diverts the focus and attention to the oars, as he feels as if his pride is being challenged.
thats really good:D
I have my literature exam tomorrow and I still don't know what's going on in this poem. However, your video has really helped me to understand it.Thank you so much!!
Before I watched this video I didn't understand the prelude at all, but now I do and this analysis is amazing! Thank you so much for making it easier for me to understand! 👌🏽
Excellent , never had such a comprehensive analysis before.
+Darakhshan Kaukab thanks!
wow, your better than my English teacher for sure
44 minute video? Only for mr bruff :)
On the topic of repeating "no" (41:59), another interpretation of it could be that he is repeating the various ways in which there is no colour or light in his world. There are no "pleasant images" or "colours of green fields", linking back to the "darkness" he feels. This darkness acts as a metaphor for how he has been left in the dark after having his ignorance and naivety revealed.
Anyone 2024 revising this shit over easter?
yuppp🤣
Yeahhh 😂
Less than two weeks left omg I can’t do this😭
Paragraph that I made using one of Mr. Bruff's first points on Language (would be great if you could feedback just wanna know what I can improve)
When the young Wordsworth takes the “boat tied to a willow tree”, it is described as an “act of stealth”. This shows that he is sneaky and sly, and shows that he has no care for the consequences for his actions. This prideful attitude is repeated in the poem when the boy feels “proud of his skill” with the boat. The repeated use of this prideful attitude may show the poet’s representation of not only this child but society as whole, and possibly that society feels they are superior to nature, which can be seen with the glorified noun “skill”, and that it can take away from nature what it wants without fear of consequences. However, the arrogant imagery of the boy is halted when he sees the mountain. It is described as “a huge peak, black and huge”. The use of a basic word, “huge”, and the repetition of it shows how speechless the child is when seeing the full power of nature. As a Romantic, Wordsworth may have been trying to emphasize something precious and far more powerful than humans and used the little boy’s naiveness as a satirical attack on the self-absorbed nature of society. The reader may feel empathy towards the child but also admire the effect that nature had on him.
Thank you so much for these videos! I love English and your videos allow me to hear some alternative interpretations. You are an English hero!
+Georgia Carr thanks!
tomorrow ahhhhhhhhhhhhh I hate this subject it's so pointless just force us to do english lang and be done with it
Your videos are very helpful I am now much better at poetry thank u !
honestly i just got so into it thank you
Thanks a ton! You made it so simple and accessible. Glad to be a subscriber.
+Artha Neog great!
I can't believe I watched this whole video
Well done
You really did an amazing work and gave a new perspective to read this poem! Thank you !
Great!
'towered up between me and the stars'-the tower is a metaphorical wall, the fact that it is metaphorical means that it can be broken, it shows how man always breaks the boundaries. Walls are also a form of protection, man is complacent even though nature is like a 'mother'
our teachers literally set us homework to watch your videos, that's how good they are!
+Em Vine great!
I got your copy for the translation for Romeo and Juliet for the Junior Cert. you have helped me a lot, thank you 🥰 You are the main reason I was able to answer the Romeo and Juliet question in the paper as I had an issue understanding the Shakespearean language. Every time when studying and had an issue with the language I would open it up to help me out ❤️
This was really helpful as I was finding it quite difficult to catch up after I missed my lesson due to the fact this poem covers so much. Thanks :)
This video was so helpful, thank you so much as I have an English lit mock tomorrow and this was a poem I had no idea how to analyse👍🏼
Was so confused by this poem before, but now it all makes senseeee! Thankssss mate :)
Thank you so much for this, I just hope I'm able to remember the quotes and compare the right poems. For my mock I did the other week, I think I did good at the poetry, thanks to you! I get my results on Friday I think. Thank you for all these videos! Defiantly helped me understood all the poems. Thank you :)
You made this poem so easy to recap, thanks I'm sure to be ready for Paper 2!!!!:)🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂
Brilliant analysis!! Never understood this poem before this video! ❤️
Thank you.
Thank you! That was very nice insight into the poem. Please make videos on other important extracts from Prelude too.
The young Williams’ feeling of superiority is ironic considering he was well in touch with nature and knows the fragility of existence as his parents are both dead.
AMAZING VIDEO! IM GOING INTO YEAR11 AND I FEEL TRULY YOUR GOING TO BE AMAZING HELP TO ME!
Through subverting the typical SVO sentence structure - ie by spreading it across 4 lines from "When" to "Upreared its head" - Wordsworth highlights how difficult he as a child has found this situation. The long winded subverted, sentence form represents how he struggles to comprehend the hidden "peak"; the pride he feels throughout the extract until now represents the power man feels it has, but at this moment Wordsworth comes to the realisation that nature is the one with true power. Moreover, the fact that this sentence is replete with enjambment could suggest that this view runs through society linking to another of his ideas that man is arrogant with its supposed power. Finally, to complete this sentence, he leaves us with the personification found in "upreared its head": by leaving the sentence on this note, he almost metaphorically says that nature will have the last laugh, that although we as a species believe we are truly powerful, a divine omnipotent force dictates the ways of the world not us - the divine side associated with this analysis links to the ideology Wordsworth would have followed as it is an integral part of creating an epic poem.
such an amazing resource that helped me to understand this poem so well , cheers
great!
Sat down with my anthology and wrote out a lot of good annotations another two pages full! Helped to inspire a lot of my own interpretations too thank you!!
Brilliant!
Thank u so much for spending so much time on us students
Thank you for spending time watching the videos!
You said in the video that you would link the artice about the Freudian approach to the poem, but I cant find it in the description? I'd quite like to have an alternative interpretation so could you find the link if you still have it from your research? Great video, worth the two hours I spent watching it 😊 👍
posted 8 yrs ago but using it for my exam next month 😁 thanks mr bruff.
No problem!