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ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?
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ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3. Which sentence in the passage best shows the narrator's point of view on the topic of Chelsea Simpson?
ELA 3: "I Hear America Singing" 54 Views
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Description:
We hear America singing, too, but it's almost always the latest Bieber jam. No wonder we haven't been driven to write any poems about that.
Transcript
- 00:04
[Coop and Dino singing]
- 00:13
Have you ever read a poem and felt totally confused? [Girl reading a poem]
- 00:16
Maybe it used difficult words, or complex metaphors, or was just straight-up all-over-the-place?
- 00:21
Y'know, like...
- 00:22
Horseradish rounds the bend of my heart O'er hill, o'er dale, the wasabi rages on
Full Transcript
- 00:27
And all the while… …the ketchup
- 00:29
…slowly… ….weeps.
- 00:31
…Yeah, we just made that up, but still. [Ketchup bottle weeps]
- 00:33
Some poems are that complicated.
- 00:35
A good example of a more complicated poem that's…y'know, actually good would be Walt
- 00:40
Whitman's “I Hear America Singing.”
- 00:42
Let's start by reading it now. [Book opens]
- 00:44
Hit pause if you have to.
- 00:45
We'll be over here, writing sonnets about mustard and mayonnaise.
- 00:53
Pretty nice sounding poem, huh?
- 00:55
But how much of it did you follow? [Girl with a red cape walks through a maze]
- 00:57
If you got confused a few times along the way, we don't blame you – it's not quite
- 01:00
as simple our amazing horseradish poem.
- 01:02
So let's go back and figure out anything that might have left us scratching our heads. [Girl scratches head]
- 01:05
Beginning with the word “varied,” right there in the first line.
- 01:08
If things are “varied” that means that they're different, or not the same.
- 01:12
The word after that is “carols” which means songs.
- 01:15
So this first line is saying that there are a whole bunch of different songs being sung
- 01:19
about America.
- 01:20
After this, he goes on to list a whole bunch of different people and what they're singing. [Teacher discussing poem to class]
- 01:24
The next word that might trip you up is in the line about mechanics – see that word “blithe”?
- 01:28
That's just a fancy word for saying someone is happy or joyous.
- 01:32
So now we know that the mechanic is singing a happy song. [Mechanic walks and musical notes appear]
- 01:35
So…probably nothing by Adele, then.
- 01:38
And what about the word “mason”?
- 01:40
We know it must be a person, because that seems to be the pattern Whitman is following
- 01:43
in the poem – but what is a mason?
- 01:46
Never fear, Shmoop is here! [Man wearing shmoop t-shirt appears]
- 01:48
Mason is a word for a builder that works with brick or stone.
- 01:51
Easy, huh?
- 01:52
In fact, Whitman seems to be listing lots of jobs in this poem – like “ploughboy."
- 01:56
Which is a word for someone whose job it is to lead animals with a plow.
- 01:59
Nearly there – but we've got one more fancy word to cover, and it comes in the second
- 02:04
to last line of the poem.
- 02:05
That word right there... robust. [word robust highlighted in yellow]
- 02:08
We can see it's in a list that describes young men, which makes sense, since it's another
- 02:12
word for “strong.”
- 02:13
That should clear up some of the more confusing words for you.
- 02:16
The poem isn't really all too complex when you break it down – it's about a whole bunch
- 02:19
of different people singing a whole bunch of different songs. [People singing songs as they walk by]
- 02:22
And together, those songs make us America….
- 02:25
Diverse and beautiful!
- 02:27
They also probably make our throats sore after a while.
- 02:29
Singing all day sounds downright exhausting. [Man singing in a meeting and falls to the floor]
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