'Pope' is featured as a movie character in the following productions:
Payday (2014)
Actors:
Wade Alleyne (actor),
Dario Bellamy-Audain (actor),
Zandré Bowen (actor),
Jerome Branch (actor),
Josiah Brathwaite (actor),
Ramon Broomes (actor),
Kirk Brown (actor),
Adrian Browne (actor),
Dyestra Browne (actor),
Andrew Franklin (actor),
Damien Gibson (actor),
Jermaine Gittens (actor),
Tracy Greenidge (actor),
Arlon Griffith (actor),
Simon Alleyne (actor),
Plot: Payday, a Barbadian comedy-drama/buddy film showcasing a raw slice of Barbadian community life. Romie, an aspiring mechanic and ladies man, with his brutally honest best friend Pack, invest their entire salaries in a down-payment on a garage. Their goal: to establish a successful mechanic's shop to get away from their boring jobs as security guards, their loving yet eccentric and demanding families, and poor standard of living in their village - Pickletons. Their simple task of making the down-payment to the garage owner at the village lime that night is hilariously complicated by Romie's love-life, and Pack's love for cannabis. The complications and laughs multiply as the best friends go to extremes to avoid violent drug men, a charity collector, crazy ex-girlfriends and other wacky villagers.
Genres:
Comedy,
Taglines: The challenge is not making money, it's keeping it!
Suburban Gothic (2014)
Actors:
Jeffrey Combs (actor),
Matthew Gray Gubler (actor),
Darin Heames (actor),
Jeff Hennessy (actor),
Hans Howes (actor),
Marcus Langston (actor),
Ty LaPlaunt (actor),
Christopher Mastandrea (actor),
Jack Plotnick (actor),
Mel Rodriguez (actor),
Ray Santiago (actor),
Cade Sutton (actor),
John Waters (actor),
Muse Watson (actor),
Ronnie Gene Blevins (actor),
Plot: Raymond has a prestigious MBA, but he can't find work. He can channel the paranormal, but chatting with a cute girl mystifies him. Kicked out of his big city apartment, Raymond returns home to his overbearing mother, ex-jock father, and beer-bellied classmates. But when a vengeful ghost terrorizes the small town, the city-boy recruits Becca, a badass local bartender, to solve the mystery of the spirit threatening everyone's lives.
Genres:
Comedy,
Horror,
One Bad Thing (2012)
Actors:
Brad Barnett (actor),
Nicole Boyd (actor),
Oto Brezina (actor),
Curt Darwin (actor),
Brandon Dean (actor),
Devon Graye (actor),
Kurtis James (actor),
Myles Jones (actor),
Johan Luis (actor),
Tony Saenz (actor),
Johnny Williams (actor),
Jada Facer (actress),
Amy Jorgensen (actress),
Rachel Kiser (actress),
Trinity Marquez (actress),
Plot: A short film inspired by the work of legendary comic book artist, Brian Bolland. The story of a seemingly ordinary young citizen who finds his life to be painstakingly predictable and... boring. Due to stress and sleep deprivation, he battles the onset of mental instability and explores his primeval desires for anarchy, violence and murder. Locked in his room, he videotapes his plan to kill.
Genres:
Action,
Drama,
Short,
Thriller,
Anonymous (2011)
Actors:
Joachim Paul Assböck (actor),
Christian Banzhaf (actor),
Gode Benedix (actor),
Carsten Berger (actor),
Oliver Bigalke (actor),
Julian Bleach (actor),
Detlef Bothe (actor),
Jasper Britton (actor),
Michael Brown (actor),
Victor Calero (actor),
Jamie Campbell Bower (actor),
James Clyde (actor),
Paolo De Vita (actor),
Ned Dennehy (actor),
Sebastian Armesto (actor),
Plot: Edward De Vere, Earl of Oxford, is presented as the real author of Shakespeare's works. Edward's life is followed through flashbacks from a young child, through to the end of his life. He is portrayed as a child prodigy who writes and performs A Midsummer Night's Dream for a young Elizabeth I. A series of events sees his plays being performed by a frontman, Shakespeare.
Keywords: 16th-century, abandonment, actor, actress, ale, ambush, amnesty, anonymity, applause, arrest
Genres:
Drama,
History,
Thriller,
Taglines: Was Shakespeare a Fraud?
Quotes:
William Shakespeare: ...and the whole bloody thing in verse.::Ben Jonson: It's really not that difficult... if you try.::William Shakespeare: Oh, and have you ever tried? But soft! What light through yonder window breaks? It is the east, and Juliet is the sun...::Ben Jonson: You. Cannot. Play Romeo.::William Shakespeare: What! Why not? I'm perfect for the role. I'm perfect! I will not let that oaf Spencer have another go at one of my roles. No! Only Will Shakespeare can pump the life into Romeo's veins!... And his codpiece.
Ben Jonson: Politics? My play has nothing to do with politics. I-i-i-it's just a simple comedy.::Earl of Oxford: It showed your betters as fools who'd go through life barely managing to get food from plate to mouth were it not for the cleverness of their servants. All art is political, Jonson, otherwise it would just be decoration. And all artists have something to say, otherwise they'd make shoes. And you are not a cobbler, are you Jonson.
Young Earl of Oxford: [after sword gets knocked into young Robert Cecil's chess game] You were losing anyway.::Boy Robert Cecil: [had been playing alone] I was also winning!::Young Earl of Oxford: [tosses a piece back at Robert, who misses it] Really?
Prologue: Though our story is at an end, our poet's is not; for his monument is everliving. Not of stone but of verse. And it shall be remembered. As long as words are made of breath. And breath of life.
Ben Jonson: You are the soul of the age... Undeniable perfection that plagued my soul.
Robert Cecil: Plays are the work of the devil - born from a cesspool of plague, whoredom, thievery, fornication, and heresy.
Anne De Vere: You, your friends, your blasphemous theater have brought nothing but ruin and dishonor to this family.::Ben Jonson: Ruin? Dishonor? My lady, you, your family, even I, even Queen Elizabeth herself will be remembered solely because we had the honor to live whilst your husband put ink to paper.
Earl of Oxford: All art is political, Jonson. Otherwise it would just be decoration.
Seraphim Falls (2006)
Actors:
George Anton (actor),
Robert Baker (actor),
Richard Barela (actor),
Xander Berkeley (actor),
James Blackburn (actor),
Pierce Brosnan (actor),
Clayton Laurence Cheek (actor),
Harp Corrigan (actor),
Adon Cravens (actor),
Jordan Del Spina (actor),
Bill Dufault (actor),
Hugh Elliot (actor),
Scott Flick (actor),
Darren Gibson (actor),
Christopher Andrews (actor),
Plot: In the 1860s, five men have been tracking a sixth across Nevada for more than two weeks. They shoot and wound him, but he gets away. They pursue, led by the dour Carver, who will pay them each $1 a day once he's captured. The hunted is Gideon, resourceful, skilled with a knife. Gideon's flight and Carver's hunt require horses, water, and bullets. The course takes them past lone settlers, a wagon train, a rail crew, settlements, and an Indian philosopher. What is the reason for the hunt; what connects Gideon and Carver? What happened at Seraphim Falls?
Keywords: 1860s, 19th-century, ambush, american-civil-war, american-indian, arm-wound, attempted-rape, baby, bible-quote, blood
Genres:
Action,
Drama,
Thriller,
War,
Western,
Taglines: Never turn your back on the past. Vengeance never rests.
Quotes:
Carver: Son, nobody can protect nobody in this world. The sooner you realize that, the better.
Hayes: Reckon we ought to camp somewheres else?::Carver: Afraid the word of God will spoil your digestion?::Hayes: I never was much for scripture.::Carver: Nothing to fear, Mr. Hayes. Them's just words. Ain't no God out here.
[first lines]::Hayes: Well, we definitely got I'm. I wouldn't say gut shot, but got 'im pretty good.::Pope: He didn't even take his rifle. Horse run off though.::Hayes: It's cleared up some. Why don't we get a move on.::Carver: Let him bleed...
Virgil: How do you write "wife"?::Hayes: Kid, that's W-H-O-R-E. Don't much matter how you spell it, a woman ain't gonna be yours unless you're paying her for the night. You pay her to be sweet to you, kid, that's all. Don't never mix up money and love.
Gideon: [looks at emptied money pouch] No wonder you don't talk much. Too busy thieving.
Madame Louise Fair: You men, you always choosing a gun over a remedy.
Gideon: Why are you doing this?::Carver: Seraphim Falls.::Carver: If you kill this son of a bitch, it will not be paid. Extremities only!
The Kid: He must be part Indian or wolf. Eat a man like that.::Hayes: He didn't eat him. Go.
Gideon: Your sister, she don't take kindly to thieving. There's plenty of time for that when you grow up.
Virgil: Afraid I'm gonna have to ask you to stop walking.::Gideon: Let me be, boy. Best just go on back up to your kin.::Virgil: Mister, I never shot nobody in the back before. So it's best you just turn around, and you get what's coming to you.::Gideon: Boy, now you put that gun up and go on.::Virgil: Turn around.::Gideon: [turns and throws knife into Virgils' neck. Virgil falls off his horse. Gideon bends down and pulls out the knife] You're a fool, boy.
Dodgy Peter's Burg (2006)
Actors:
Aleksandr Bashirov (actor),
Denis Homchenko (actor),
Roberto Romero (director),
Roberto Romero (editor),
Plot: 300 years after the foundation of St. Petersburg, the spirit of Peter the Great is still wandering through the streets and backyards of the town. Directly affecting the new decadent lifestyle of its inhabitants, some prostrated by poverty, and some stratified in a novij Russkij enthusiastic artificial atmosphere, Peter himself becomes a "dodgy one". Gathering up the broken pieces of a dead mirror, Peter, encounters desperate reflections of the former glorious town he had founded.
Genres:
,
The Last Patrol (2000)
Actors:
Terry Big Charles (actor),
Joe Michael Burke (actor),
Yoav Dekelbaum (actor),
Chanan Elias (actor),
Ishai Golan (actor),
Yohanan Herson (actor),
Jay Koller (actor),
Dolph Lundgren (actor),
Juliano Mer-Khamis (actor),
Nati Ravitz (actor),
Ze'ev Revach (actor),
Howard Rypp (actor),
Sherri Alexander (actress),
Rebecca Cross (actress),
Jack Adalist (actor),
Plot: An earthquake measuring 9.5 on the Richter Scale splits California into an island with a perpetual dustcloud hanging over it. The survivors of the terrible ordeal have started to come together in the shape of Nick Preston (Dolph Lundgren) an air force captain, and other fractions of the military, including Sarah McBride and Lucky Simcoe, and have situated themselves in a warfare junkyard, holding weaponry from forgotten conflicts. They are searching for food, fuel and fellow survivors, and a possible path into the next world, while also dodging a violent plague that causes the skin to boil.
Keywords: action-hero, army, barbecue, bare-chested-male, battle, battlefield, blood, blood-splatter, boyfriend-girlfriend-relationship, brawl
Genres:
Action,
Drama,
Sci-Fi,
Thriller,
Taglines: Welcome to the island of California. After the final earthquake... welcome to the island of California. The future depends on one man.
Quotes:
Nick Preston: Something's not right. Something shifted.::Lucky Simcoe: Shifted? Now you're spooking me, Captain.
State Trooper: Want a peanut?
Zapach psiej siersci (1982)
Actors:
Boris Arabow (actor),
Vasil Botchvarov (actor),
Karol Chodura (actor),
Dobri Dobrew (actor),
Emil Dzamdzijew (actor),
Hristo Kalchev (actor),
Hristo Paskalev (actor),
Kiril Popov (actor),
Vladimir Russinov (actor),
Veliko Velikov (actor),
Vladimir Vladimirov (actor),
Roman Wilhelmi (actor),
Magdalena Argirova (actress),
Svetlana Atanasova (actress),
Aglika Boyadzhieva (actress),
Genres:
Thriller,
Doctor Faustus (1967)
Actors:
Adrian Benjamin (actor),
Richard Burton (actor),
Richard Carwardine (actor),
Jeremy Chandler (actor),
Ram Chopra (actor),
Ambrose Coghill (actor),
Nevill Coghill (actor),
Richard Durden (actor),
Richard Durden (actor),
Jeremy Eccles (actor),
Richard Harrison (actor),
Richard Heffer (actor),
Anthony Kaufman (actor),
Nicholas Loukes (actor),
Patrick Barwise (actor),
Plot: Faustus is a scholar at the University of Wittenberg when he earns his doctorate degree. His insatiable appetite for knowledge and power leads him to employ necromancy to conjure Mephistopheles out of hell. He bargains away his soul to Lucifer in exchange for living 24 years during which Mephistopheles will be his slave. Faustus signs the pact in his own blood and Mephistopheles reveals the works of the devil to Faustus.
Keywords: based-on-play, bubble, carried-on-shoulders, character-name-in-title, deal-with-the-devil, hell, human-skeleton, human-skull, maggots
Genres:
Drama,
Horror,
Mystery,
Taglines: The story of a scientist who sells his soul to the devil
Quotes:
Doctor Faustus: [speaking about Helen of Troy] Was this the face that launched a thousand ships and burnt the topless towers of Illium? Sweet Helen, make me immortal with a kiss!
[Mephistopheles has come to Faustus' study]::Doctor Faustus: Where are you damned?::Mephistopheles: In hell.::Doctor Faustus: How comes it, then, that thou art out of hell?::Mephistopheles: Why, this is hell, nor am I out of it. / Think'st thou that I, who saw the face of God / And tasted the eternal joys of heaven, / Am not tormented with ten thousand hells / In being deprived of everlasting bliss?
The Great Defender (1934)
Actors:
Frank Atkinson (actor),
Richard Bird (actor),
O.B. Clarence (actor),
Alec Fraser (actor),
Jimmy Godden (actor),
Hal Gordon (actor),
Laurence Hanray (actor),
Robert Horton (actor),
Matheson Lang (actor),
Sam Livesey (actor),
Arthur Margetson (actor),
C. Denier Warren (actor),
J. Fisher White (actor),
Margaret Bannerman (actress),
Kathleen Harrison (actress),
Plot: Sir Douglas Rolls had earned the reputation of being England's greatest barrister. But he has just been informed by Doctor Hackett, specialist on diseases of the heart, that overwork has taken its toll and if Sir Douglas does not take off for several months he stands a good chance of dying soon. Back in his chambers, a solicitor named Pope was waiting to see him. Pope's firm handled most of the important legal cases. Pope was there to ask Sir Douglas to take up the defense of his client, Leslie Locke. Sir Douglas's mind went back some twenty years when he was struggling for recognition, and he had been in love with a very beautiful girl ---Laura Hyde. Sir Douglas had never spoken of his love, however, because he was very poor, and wanted to be quite certain, before he married, that he would be able to give his wife every luxury. Another admirer of Laura at the time was a well-to-do, volatile and impetuous young artist who, before the plodding Rolls knew what was happening, had swept Laura off her feet and married her. The artist's name was Leslie Locke. Sir Douglas had never gotten over his love for Laura and had never taken any interest in any other woman since, and he and Laura had remained the closest of friends. Pope's client, charged with murder of a model he had been seeing, and going on trial for his life, was the man who had married Rolls' only-love. Sir Douglas, knowing it may kill him, takes the case, and fights with the last of his strength to save the life of the husband of the woman he has always loved. And, possibly, have to implicate Laura in the proceedings.
Keywords: 1930s, affair, alibi, artist, barrister, chambers, cheating-husband, circumstantial-evidence, clerk, client
Genres:
Mystery,
Romance,
Taglines: A great counsel is dying, but fights with the last of his strength for a man who is on trial for his life!
-
BBC FOUR Alexander Pope: Rediscovering a Genius
An entertaining docudrama that portrays the astonishing life of Alexander Pope (1688-1744), a forgotten genius and a child prodigy akin to Mozart. He was the greatest poet of the 18th century and is the second most quoted writer in the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations after Shakespeare.
Pope stood at just four feet six inches tall. He was a hunchback and an outsider in every way, yet he made the equivalent, in today's money, of one million pounds from his poetry. His satire and wit are all around us, in our everyday speech and songs, yet few are aware of the author and his achievements.
Pope’s work is concerned with feminism, friendship, freedom of speech, the environment, corruption in government and what it means to be a moral citizen.
Subscribe and 🔔 to BBC FOUR
Stream original BBC ...
published: 19 Nov 2021
-
Alexander Pope Lesson
Don't forget to hit the Like and Subscribe videos to make sure you receive notifications about upcoming Literature, Grammar, Reading, Writing, and World History lessons from MrBrayman.Info.
In this lesson, we take a look at Alexander Pope's biography and its impact on his life, and then we'll look at epistolary literature and blank verse in preparation for a reading of Pope's Essay on Man, Epistle 1.
Below is the outline of the slides used in the lesson:
Alexander Pope Lesson
Brief Biography of Pope
Blank Verse and Epistolary Literature
Learning Objectives and Connections to the Project
Alexander Pope, 1688-1744
Lived and worked at a time in England when Catholics were subject to laws similar to the Jim Crow Laws of the American South
Early health problems left him undersized and physic...
published: 10 Mar 2013
-
Alexander Pope- neoclassical age
Dsssb, NET and other competitive exams
published: 27 Jul 2018
-
Alexander Pope-brief background
English 331
published: 25 Feb 2016
-
10 Key Facts about Alexander Pope every UGC NET Aspirant must know
"True ease in writing comes from art, not chance, As those move easiest who have learn’d to dance."
One can miss out on anything during NTA UGC NET Preparation but not Alexander Pope and his works. The English poet and satirist Alexander Pope (1688-1744) was the greatest poet and verse satirist of the Augustan period. No other poet in the history of English literature has handled the heroic couplet with comparable flexibility and brilliance.Also known as the 'Wasp of Twickenham' . Poet Alexander Pope earned this nickname because of his stinging satirical attacks on the famous people of the age, especially other writers. This video gives you the in depth knowledge of Alexander Pope and his works for UGC NET English.
Struggling to find NTA UGC NET/JRF coaching near your home?
Join India's...
published: 07 Apr 2018
-
TOP 20 Alexander Pope Quotes
TOP 20 Alexander Pope Quotes.
Wallpapers - https://quotefancy.com/alexander-pope-quotes
“To err is human; to forgive, divine.”
— Alexander Pope (00:00)
“A little learning is a dangerous thing.”
— Alexander Pope (00:07)
“The world forgetting, by the world forgot. Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind! Each pray’r accepted, and each wish resign’d.”
— Alexander Pope (00:14)
“Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.”
— Alexander Pope (00:21)
“Every professional was once an amateur.”
— Alexander Pope (00:28)
“Nature and nature’s laws lay hid in the night. God said, Let Newton be! and all was light!”
— Alexander Pope (00:35)
“Hope springs eternal.”
— Alexander Pope (00:42)
“Vice is a monster of so frightful mien As to be hated needs but to be seen; Yet seen too oft, familiar with her fa...
published: 03 Jan 2018
-
Alexander pope biography in hindi (augustan age /neo classical age )
#Augustan_age #Neoclassical_age #Pope
published: 26 Apr 2019
-
An Essay on Man by Alexander POPE read by Martin Geeson | Full Audio Book
An Essay on Man by Alexander POPE (1688 - 1744)
Genre(s): General Fiction, Poetry, *Non-fiction
Read by: Martin Geeson in English
Chapters:
00:00:00 - 00 - Author's Preface
00:05:00 - 01 - Epistle I
00:28:05 - 02 - Epistle II
00:50:59 - 03 - Epistle III
01:16:42 - 04 - Epistle IV
Pope's Essay on Man, a masterpiece of concise summary in itself, can fairly be summed up as an optimistic enquiry into mankind's place in the vast Chain of Being.
Each of the poem's four Epistles takes a different perspective, presenting Man in relation to the universe, as individual, in society and, finally, tracing his prospects for achieving the goal of happiness.
In choosing stately rhyming couplets to explore his theme, Pope sometimes becomes obscure through compressing his language overmuch....
published: 17 May 2018
-
Alexander Pope
This video will give an introduction to Alexander Pope. All details of Alexander Pope's life have been given in this video.
#AlexanderPope
published: 18 Sep 2020
-
Lecture: Alexander Pope
Alexander Pope. An Essay on Criticism
published: 03 Dec 2015
-
Alexander Pope Ode on Solitude poem with text
I HOPE IT HELPS
published: 07 Feb 2015
-
"Ode on Solitude" by Alexander Pope (read by Tom O'Bedlam)
The picture is called Rural Scene with cottage - by an unknown artist
The portrait of Pope was by Michael Dahl
published: 09 Nov 2009
-
Alexander Pope | Biography of Alexander Pope | Alexander Pope Life and Works | Pope's Heroic Couplet
Please, join the membership of this channel by clicking on below link https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDGm4b_5syWwduR9gHaOnXQ/join
Alexander Pope Biography | Augustan Age/Neo Classical Age | Important Works of Alexander Pope
English Literature, English Language
Hi, friends welcome to my YouTube channel of English literature. This article is focused on English-language literature.
Alexander Pope | Biography of Alexander Pope | Important Works of Alexander Pope | Augustan Age
Alexander Pope | Biography of Alexander Pope | Alexander Pope Life and Works | Pope's Heroic Couplet
* Please, follow me on social media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/EnglitZone
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/englit-zone-72402416b/
Pinterest: https://in.pinterest.com/englitzone/
Instagram: https://www....
published: 12 Jan 2021
-
Alexander Pope
Te invitamos a conocer la vida del poeta inglés Alexander Pope.
published: 26 Nov 2020
49:37
BBC FOUR Alexander Pope: Rediscovering a Genius
An entertaining docudrama that portrays the astonishing life of Alexander Pope (1688-1744), a forgotten genius and a child prodigy akin to Mozart. He was the gr...
An entertaining docudrama that portrays the astonishing life of Alexander Pope (1688-1744), a forgotten genius and a child prodigy akin to Mozart. He was the greatest poet of the 18th century and is the second most quoted writer in the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations after Shakespeare.
Pope stood at just four feet six inches tall. He was a hunchback and an outsider in every way, yet he made the equivalent, in today's money, of one million pounds from his poetry. His satire and wit are all around us, in our everyday speech and songs, yet few are aware of the author and his achievements.
Pope’s work is concerned with feminism, friendship, freedom of speech, the environment, corruption in government and what it means to be a moral citizen.
Subscribe and 🔔 to BBC FOUR
Stream original BBC programmes FIRST on BBC iPlayer https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer
Follow BBC FOUR on Social Media
Twitter: https://twitter.com/BBCFOUR
Instagram: https://instagram.com/BBC.FOUR
#bbcfour
All our TV channels and S4C are available to watch live through BBC iPlayer, although some programmes may not be available to stream online due to rights. If you would like to read more on what types of programmes are available to watch live, check the 'Are all programmes that are broadcast available on BBC iPlayer?' FAQ 👉 https://bbc.in/2m8ks6v
https://wn.com/BBC_Four_Alexander_Pope_Rediscovering_A_Genius
An entertaining docudrama that portrays the astonishing life of Alexander Pope (1688-1744), a forgotten genius and a child prodigy akin to Mozart. He was the greatest poet of the 18th century and is the second most quoted writer in the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations after Shakespeare.
Pope stood at just four feet six inches tall. He was a hunchback and an outsider in every way, yet he made the equivalent, in today's money, of one million pounds from his poetry. His satire and wit are all around us, in our everyday speech and songs, yet few are aware of the author and his achievements.
Pope’s work is concerned with feminism, friendship, freedom of speech, the environment, corruption in government and what it means to be a moral citizen.
Subscribe and 🔔 to BBC FOUR
Stream original BBC programmes FIRST on BBC iPlayer https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer
Follow BBC FOUR on Social Media
Twitter: https://twitter.com/BBCFOUR
Instagram: https://instagram.com/BBC.FOUR
#bbcfour
All our TV channels and S4C are available to watch live through BBC iPlayer, although some programmes may not be available to stream online due to rights. If you would like to read more on what types of programmes are available to watch live, check the 'Are all programmes that are broadcast available on BBC iPlayer?' FAQ 👉 https://bbc.in/2m8ks6v
- published: 19 Nov 2021
- views: 1034
10:23
Alexander Pope Lesson
Don't forget to hit the Like and Subscribe videos to make sure you receive notifications about upcoming Literature, Grammar, Reading, Writing, and World History...
Don't forget to hit the Like and Subscribe videos to make sure you receive notifications about upcoming Literature, Grammar, Reading, Writing, and World History lessons from MrBrayman.Info.
In this lesson, we take a look at Alexander Pope's biography and its impact on his life, and then we'll look at epistolary literature and blank verse in preparation for a reading of Pope's Essay on Man, Epistle 1.
Below is the outline of the slides used in the lesson:
Alexander Pope Lesson
Brief Biography of Pope
Blank Verse and Epistolary Literature
Learning Objectives and Connections to the Project
Alexander Pope, 1688-1744
Lived and worked at a time in England when Catholics were subject to laws similar to the Jim Crow Laws of the American South
Early health problems left him undersized and physically disabled
Literature was just becoming something that people could do for a living
Alexander Pope
Key Enlightenment figure along with Jonathan Swift and Sir Isaac Newton
Blank Verse
Unrhymed Iambic Pentameter
Shakespeare's verse in the plays
The version of Antigone that we read
Maintained the tradition of poetry but with a more flexible, straightforward style that anticipated prose
Epistolary Literature
Epistle: a formal letter addressed to one audience for one occasion but written in a way that it can be read by a general audience
Most of the New Testament is Saint Paul's Epistles
Epistolary novels—The Color Purple
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Written in ten stanzas (a stanza is like the paragraph of a poem, but not exactly)
Introduction: greets his audience—St. John (a friend)
Gives the thesis of the essay: [to] "vindicate the ways of God to man"—meaning to show how God's ways rule mankind
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza I: Pope takes a survey of the universe and asks his audience who made it and who's in charge—typical scientific approach to religion of the Enlightenment period
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza II: Pope begins to point out that man's place in the universe is minor and unimportant—compare this to the Biblical view of man as the most special part of the creation
Stanza III: Pope points out that men really know very little, and while Europeans think they know more than Indians, they don't
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza IV: Pope tells his audience to be wiser and that if man questions God about his place in the universe, he's acting like the fallen angels
Stanza V: This is perhaps the most devastating stanza in the epistle; it's Pope's personification of Pride as a selfish little brat
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanzas VI and VI: Pope points out that God has used Nature to give all animals their special powers and bodies—this is a typical Enlightenment view of Nature as a perfectly ordered system designed by the Master Architect (God the engineer or scientist)
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanzas VIII and IX: Pope continues to point out the evils of pride and questioning the perfection of Nature and man's place in it
Stanza X: Pope gives a very strong argument for humility and acceptance, ending with the chilling and humbling line: "whatever is, is right."
Learning Objectives
More exposure to blank verse and exposure to epistolary writing
More exposure to and practice in interpreting figurative language—especially personification and allusions
Reading poetry based on punctuation and not line breaks
Analyzing how figurative language creates meaning—written in essay format
Connection to the Project
Hubris is the Classical Greek idea of the kind of pride that leads to a fall
Pope undermines the hubris of the Enlightenment
Humans aren't that smart or special
Humans are just one part of God's larger creation
Humans should be more humble and accepting of the way things are
Pope counteracts Europe's growing sense of its self-importance and tries to reconnect his audience to humility
Lesson Completed—Good Job
I've also posted an audio "follow along" video online; it isn't much to look at, but it'll help you get the sound of Pope's poetry
https://wn.com/Alexander_Pope_Lesson
Don't forget to hit the Like and Subscribe videos to make sure you receive notifications about upcoming Literature, Grammar, Reading, Writing, and World History lessons from MrBrayman.Info.
In this lesson, we take a look at Alexander Pope's biography and its impact on his life, and then we'll look at epistolary literature and blank verse in preparation for a reading of Pope's Essay on Man, Epistle 1.
Below is the outline of the slides used in the lesson:
Alexander Pope Lesson
Brief Biography of Pope
Blank Verse and Epistolary Literature
Learning Objectives and Connections to the Project
Alexander Pope, 1688-1744
Lived and worked at a time in England when Catholics were subject to laws similar to the Jim Crow Laws of the American South
Early health problems left him undersized and physically disabled
Literature was just becoming something that people could do for a living
Alexander Pope
Key Enlightenment figure along with Jonathan Swift and Sir Isaac Newton
Blank Verse
Unrhymed Iambic Pentameter
Shakespeare's verse in the plays
The version of Antigone that we read
Maintained the tradition of poetry but with a more flexible, straightforward style that anticipated prose
Epistolary Literature
Epistle: a formal letter addressed to one audience for one occasion but written in a way that it can be read by a general audience
Most of the New Testament is Saint Paul's Epistles
Epistolary novels—The Color Purple
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Written in ten stanzas (a stanza is like the paragraph of a poem, but not exactly)
Introduction: greets his audience—St. John (a friend)
Gives the thesis of the essay: [to] "vindicate the ways of God to man"—meaning to show how God's ways rule mankind
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza I: Pope takes a survey of the universe and asks his audience who made it and who's in charge—typical scientific approach to religion of the Enlightenment period
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza II: Pope begins to point out that man's place in the universe is minor and unimportant—compare this to the Biblical view of man as the most special part of the creation
Stanza III: Pope points out that men really know very little, and while Europeans think they know more than Indians, they don't
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza IV: Pope tells his audience to be wiser and that if man questions God about his place in the universe, he's acting like the fallen angels
Stanza V: This is perhaps the most devastating stanza in the epistle; it's Pope's personification of Pride as a selfish little brat
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanzas VI and VI: Pope points out that God has used Nature to give all animals their special powers and bodies—this is a typical Enlightenment view of Nature as a perfectly ordered system designed by the Master Architect (God the engineer or scientist)
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanzas VIII and IX: Pope continues to point out the evils of pride and questioning the perfection of Nature and man's place in it
Stanza X: Pope gives a very strong argument for humility and acceptance, ending with the chilling and humbling line: "whatever is, is right."
Learning Objectives
More exposure to blank verse and exposure to epistolary writing
More exposure to and practice in interpreting figurative language—especially personification and allusions
Reading poetry based on punctuation and not line breaks
Analyzing how figurative language creates meaning—written in essay format
Connection to the Project
Hubris is the Classical Greek idea of the kind of pride that leads to a fall
Pope undermines the hubris of the Enlightenment
Humans aren't that smart or special
Humans are just one part of God's larger creation
Humans should be more humble and accepting of the way things are
Pope counteracts Europe's growing sense of its self-importance and tries to reconnect his audience to humility
Lesson Completed—Good Job
I've also posted an audio "follow along" video online; it isn't much to look at, but it'll help you get the sound of Pope's poetry
- published: 10 Mar 2013
- views: 39292
13:20
10 Key Facts about Alexander Pope every UGC NET Aspirant must know
"True ease in writing comes from art, not chance, As those move easiest who have learn’d to dance."
One can miss out on anything during NTA UGC NET Preparation ...
"True ease in writing comes from art, not chance, As those move easiest who have learn’d to dance."
One can miss out on anything during NTA UGC NET Preparation but not Alexander Pope and his works. The English poet and satirist Alexander Pope (1688-1744) was the greatest poet and verse satirist of the Augustan period. No other poet in the history of English literature has handled the heroic couplet with comparable flexibility and brilliance.Also known as the 'Wasp of Twickenham' . Poet Alexander Pope earned this nickname because of his stinging satirical attacks on the famous people of the age, especially other writers. This video gives you the in depth knowledge of Alexander Pope and his works for UGC NET English.
Struggling to find NTA UGC NET/JRF coaching near your home?
Join India's finest Online Coaching for NTA UGC NET Exam only at https://www.arpitakarwa.com
Online Courses available for:
⏩ NTA UGC NET Paper 1 (General Paper)
⏩ NTA UGC NET Paper 2 (English)
⏩ PGT, TGT, SET, SLET, DSSSB (English)
⏩ M.A Entrance & Ph.D Entrance (English)
To get complete details about our Online Courses:
⏩ Call/Whatsapp: +91 7976603731
⏩ Website: https://www.arpitakarwa.com/
⏩ Email: contact@arpitakarwa.com
Follow us to receive GoNETQuiz & latest UGC NET updates:
🌎 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/arpitakarwa/
🌎 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/arpitakarwa/
🌎 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/arpitakarwa/
🌎Telegram: http://www.t.me/arpitakarwa
🌎 Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/arpitakarwa/
#AlexanderPope #EnlightenmentAge #UgcNetEnglish
https://wn.com/10_Key_Facts_About_Alexander_Pope_Every_Ugc_Net_Aspirant_Must_Know
"True ease in writing comes from art, not chance, As those move easiest who have learn’d to dance."
One can miss out on anything during NTA UGC NET Preparation but not Alexander Pope and his works. The English poet and satirist Alexander Pope (1688-1744) was the greatest poet and verse satirist of the Augustan period. No other poet in the history of English literature has handled the heroic couplet with comparable flexibility and brilliance.Also known as the 'Wasp of Twickenham' . Poet Alexander Pope earned this nickname because of his stinging satirical attacks on the famous people of the age, especially other writers. This video gives you the in depth knowledge of Alexander Pope and his works for UGC NET English.
Struggling to find NTA UGC NET/JRF coaching near your home?
Join India's finest Online Coaching for NTA UGC NET Exam only at https://www.arpitakarwa.com
Online Courses available for:
⏩ NTA UGC NET Paper 1 (General Paper)
⏩ NTA UGC NET Paper 2 (English)
⏩ PGT, TGT, SET, SLET, DSSSB (English)
⏩ M.A Entrance & Ph.D Entrance (English)
To get complete details about our Online Courses:
⏩ Call/Whatsapp: +91 7976603731
⏩ Website: https://www.arpitakarwa.com/
⏩ Email: contact@arpitakarwa.com
Follow us to receive GoNETQuiz & latest UGC NET updates:
🌎 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/arpitakarwa/
🌎 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/arpitakarwa/
🌎 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/arpitakarwa/
🌎Telegram: http://www.t.me/arpitakarwa
🌎 Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/arpitakarwa/
#AlexanderPope #EnlightenmentAge #UgcNetEnglish
- published: 07 Apr 2018
- views: 73306
2:21
TOP 20 Alexander Pope Quotes
TOP 20 Alexander Pope Quotes.
Wallpapers - https://quotefancy.com/alexander-pope-quotes
“To err is human; to forgive, divine.”
— Alexander Pope (00:00)
“A lit...
TOP 20 Alexander Pope Quotes.
Wallpapers - https://quotefancy.com/alexander-pope-quotes
“To err is human; to forgive, divine.”
— Alexander Pope (00:00)
“A little learning is a dangerous thing.”
— Alexander Pope (00:07)
“The world forgetting, by the world forgot. Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind! Each pray’r accepted, and each wish resign’d.”
— Alexander Pope (00:14)
“Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.”
— Alexander Pope (00:21)
“Every professional was once an amateur.”
— Alexander Pope (00:28)
“Nature and nature’s laws lay hid in the night. God said, Let Newton be! and all was light!”
— Alexander Pope (00:35)
“Hope springs eternal.”
— Alexander Pope (00:42)
“Vice is a monster of so frightful mien As to be hated needs but to be seen; Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face, We first endure, then pity, then embrace.”
— Alexander Pope (00:49)
“Thus let me live, unseen, unknown, Thus unlamented let me die, Steal from the world, and not a stone Tell where I lie.”
— Alexander Pope (00:56)
“Strength of mind is exercise, not rest.”
— Alexander Pope (01:03)
“Know then thyself, presume not God to scan; The proper study of mankind is man.”
— Alexander Pope (01:10)
“How happy is the blameless vestal’s lot? The world forgetting, by the world forgot.”
— Alexander Pope (01:17)
“Order is heaven’s first law.”
— Alexander Pope (01:24)
“Who breaks a butterfly on a wheel?”
— Alexander Pope (01:31)
“An excuse is worse and more terrible than a lie; for an excuse is a lie guarded.”
— Alexander Pope (01:38)
“True ease in writing comes from art, not chance, as those who move easiest have learned to dance.”
— Alexander Pope (01:45)
“Hope springs eternal in the human breast: Man never is, but always To be Blest.”
— Alexander Pope (01:52)
“You purchase pain with all that joy can give and die of nothing but a rage to live.”
— Alexander Pope (01:59)
“He knows to live who keeps the middle state, and neither leans on this side nor on that.”
— Alexander Pope (02:06)
“Words are like Leaves; and where they most abound, Much Fruit of Sense beneath is rarely found.”
— Alexander Pope (02:13)
Music credit: Easy Day - Kevin MacLeod
https://wn.com/Top_20_Alexander_Pope_Quotes
TOP 20 Alexander Pope Quotes.
Wallpapers - https://quotefancy.com/alexander-pope-quotes
“To err is human; to forgive, divine.”
— Alexander Pope (00:00)
“A little learning is a dangerous thing.”
— Alexander Pope (00:07)
“The world forgetting, by the world forgot. Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind! Each pray’r accepted, and each wish resign’d.”
— Alexander Pope (00:14)
“Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.”
— Alexander Pope (00:21)
“Every professional was once an amateur.”
— Alexander Pope (00:28)
“Nature and nature’s laws lay hid in the night. God said, Let Newton be! and all was light!”
— Alexander Pope (00:35)
“Hope springs eternal.”
— Alexander Pope (00:42)
“Vice is a monster of so frightful mien As to be hated needs but to be seen; Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face, We first endure, then pity, then embrace.”
— Alexander Pope (00:49)
“Thus let me live, unseen, unknown, Thus unlamented let me die, Steal from the world, and not a stone Tell where I lie.”
— Alexander Pope (00:56)
“Strength of mind is exercise, not rest.”
— Alexander Pope (01:03)
“Know then thyself, presume not God to scan; The proper study of mankind is man.”
— Alexander Pope (01:10)
“How happy is the blameless vestal’s lot? The world forgetting, by the world forgot.”
— Alexander Pope (01:17)
“Order is heaven’s first law.”
— Alexander Pope (01:24)
“Who breaks a butterfly on a wheel?”
— Alexander Pope (01:31)
“An excuse is worse and more terrible than a lie; for an excuse is a lie guarded.”
— Alexander Pope (01:38)
“True ease in writing comes from art, not chance, as those who move easiest have learned to dance.”
— Alexander Pope (01:45)
“Hope springs eternal in the human breast: Man never is, but always To be Blest.”
— Alexander Pope (01:52)
“You purchase pain with all that joy can give and die of nothing but a rage to live.”
— Alexander Pope (01:59)
“He knows to live who keeps the middle state, and neither leans on this side nor on that.”
— Alexander Pope (02:06)
“Words are like Leaves; and where they most abound, Much Fruit of Sense beneath is rarely found.”
— Alexander Pope (02:13)
Music credit: Easy Day - Kevin MacLeod
- published: 03 Jan 2018
- views: 2105
1:47:55
An Essay on Man by Alexander POPE read by Martin Geeson | Full Audio Book
An Essay on Man by Alexander POPE (1688 - 1744)
Genre(s): General Fiction, Poetry, *Non-fiction
Read by: Martin Geeson in English
Chapters:
00:00:00 - 0...
An Essay on Man by Alexander POPE (1688 - 1744)
Genre(s): General Fiction, Poetry, *Non-fiction
Read by: Martin Geeson in English
Chapters:
00:00:00 - 00 - Author's Preface
00:05:00 - 01 - Epistle I
00:28:05 - 02 - Epistle II
00:50:59 - 03 - Epistle III
01:16:42 - 04 - Epistle IV
Pope's Essay on Man, a masterpiece of concise summary in itself, can fairly be summed up as an optimistic enquiry into mankind's place in the vast Chain of Being.
Each of the poem's four Epistles takes a different perspective, presenting Man in relation to the universe, as individual, in society and, finally, tracing his prospects for achieving the goal of happiness.
In choosing stately rhyming couplets to explore his theme, Pope sometimes becomes obscure through compressing his language overmuch. By and large, the work is a triumphant exercise in philosophical poetry, communicating its broad and commonplace truths in superbly balanced phrases which remind us that Pope, alas, is one of the most quoted but least read writers in English:
'Hope springs eternal in the human breast: Man never is, but always To be Blest.'
(Summary by Martin Geeson)
More information: http://librivox.org/an-essay-on-man-by-alexander-pope/
https://wn.com/An_Essay_On_Man_By_Alexander_Pope_Read_By_Martin_Geeson_|_Full_Audio_Book
An Essay on Man by Alexander POPE (1688 - 1744)
Genre(s): General Fiction, Poetry, *Non-fiction
Read by: Martin Geeson in English
Chapters:
00:00:00 - 00 - Author's Preface
00:05:00 - 01 - Epistle I
00:28:05 - 02 - Epistle II
00:50:59 - 03 - Epistle III
01:16:42 - 04 - Epistle IV
Pope's Essay on Man, a masterpiece of concise summary in itself, can fairly be summed up as an optimistic enquiry into mankind's place in the vast Chain of Being.
Each of the poem's four Epistles takes a different perspective, presenting Man in relation to the universe, as individual, in society and, finally, tracing his prospects for achieving the goal of happiness.
In choosing stately rhyming couplets to explore his theme, Pope sometimes becomes obscure through compressing his language overmuch. By and large, the work is a triumphant exercise in philosophical poetry, communicating its broad and commonplace truths in superbly balanced phrases which remind us that Pope, alas, is one of the most quoted but least read writers in English:
'Hope springs eternal in the human breast: Man never is, but always To be Blest.'
(Summary by Martin Geeson)
More information: http://librivox.org/an-essay-on-man-by-alexander-pope/
- published: 17 May 2018
- views: 1208
10:46
Alexander Pope
This video will give an introduction to Alexander Pope. All details of Alexander Pope's life have been given in this video.
#AlexanderPope
This video will give an introduction to Alexander Pope. All details of Alexander Pope's life have been given in this video.
#AlexanderPope
https://wn.com/Alexander_Pope
This video will give an introduction to Alexander Pope. All details of Alexander Pope's life have been given in this video.
#AlexanderPope
- published: 18 Sep 2020
- views: 1404
31:30
Lecture: Alexander Pope
Alexander Pope. An Essay on Criticism
Alexander Pope. An Essay on Criticism
https://wn.com/Lecture_Alexander_Pope
Alexander Pope. An Essay on Criticism
- published: 03 Dec 2015
- views: 9855
1:08
"Ode on Solitude" by Alexander Pope (read by Tom O'Bedlam)
The picture is called Rural Scene with cottage - by an unknown artist
The portrait of Pope was by Michael Dahl
The picture is called Rural Scene with cottage - by an unknown artist
The portrait of Pope was by Michael Dahl
https://wn.com/Ode_On_Solitude_By_Alexander_Pope_(Read_By_Tom_O'Bedlam)
The picture is called Rural Scene with cottage - by an unknown artist
The portrait of Pope was by Michael Dahl
- published: 09 Nov 2009
- views: 32127
14:08
Alexander Pope | Biography of Alexander Pope | Alexander Pope Life and Works | Pope's Heroic Couplet
Please, join the membership of this channel by clicking on below link https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDGm4b_5syWwduR9gHaOnXQ/join
Alexander Pope Biography | ...
Please, join the membership of this channel by clicking on below link https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDGm4b_5syWwduR9gHaOnXQ/join
Alexander Pope Biography | Augustan Age/Neo Classical Age | Important Works of Alexander Pope
English Literature, English Language
Hi, friends welcome to my YouTube channel of English literature. This article is focused on English-language literature.
Alexander Pope | Biography of Alexander Pope | Important Works of Alexander Pope | Augustan Age
Alexander Pope | Biography of Alexander Pope | Alexander Pope Life and Works | Pope's Heroic Couplet
* Please, follow me on social media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/EnglitZone
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/englit-zone-72402416b/
Pinterest: https://in.pinterest.com/englitzone/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/englit_z/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/englit.z.16
Tumblr: https://www.tumblr.com/blog/ienglitzone
Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/user/EngLITZone
Quora: https://www.quora.com/profile/EngLIT-Zone
https://wn.com/Alexander_Pope_|_Biography_Of_Alexander_Pope_|_Alexander_Pope_Life_And_Works_|_Pope's_Heroic_Couplet
Please, join the membership of this channel by clicking on below link https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDGm4b_5syWwduR9gHaOnXQ/join
Alexander Pope Biography | Augustan Age/Neo Classical Age | Important Works of Alexander Pope
English Literature, English Language
Hi, friends welcome to my YouTube channel of English literature. This article is focused on English-language literature.
Alexander Pope | Biography of Alexander Pope | Important Works of Alexander Pope | Augustan Age
Alexander Pope | Biography of Alexander Pope | Alexander Pope Life and Works | Pope's Heroic Couplet
* Please, follow me on social media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/EnglitZone
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/englit-zone-72402416b/
Pinterest: https://in.pinterest.com/englitzone/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/englit_z/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/englit.z.16
Tumblr: https://www.tumblr.com/blog/ienglitzone
Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/user/EngLITZone
Quora: https://www.quora.com/profile/EngLIT-Zone
- published: 12 Jan 2021
- views: 3517
1:48
Alexander Pope
Te invitamos a conocer la vida del poeta inglés Alexander Pope.
Te invitamos a conocer la vida del poeta inglés Alexander Pope.
https://wn.com/Alexander_Pope
Te invitamos a conocer la vida del poeta inglés Alexander Pope.
- published: 26 Nov 2020
- views: 114
-
Age of reason (disambiguation)
Video Software we use: https://amzn.to/2KpdCQF
Ad-free videos.
You can support us by purchasing something through our Amazon-Url, thanks :)
Age of reason may refer to: 17th-century philosophy, as a successor of the Renaissance and a predecessor to the Age of Enlightenment.Age of Enlightenment in its long form of 1600–1800.The Age of Reason, a book by Thomas Paine.Age of Reason , a 1988 album by John Farnham "Age of Reason" , a song by John Farnham .
This channel is dedicated to make Wikipedia, one of the biggest knowledge databases in the world available to people with limited vision.
Article available under a Creative Commons license
Image source in video
published: 16 Sep 2016
-
Quotes by Alexander Pope -Part 4
Thank You For Watching
:)
Be Inspired.
published: 29 Oct 2021
-
Alexander
Primecoin (สัญลักษณ์: Ψ; รหัส: XPM) เป็นสกุลเงินดิจิทัลที่ใช้ระบบพิสูจน์การทำงานที่ค้นหากลุ่มของจำนวนเฉพาะ
เปิดตัวเมื่อวันที่ 7 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2556 โดยแฮ็กเกอร์นิรนามและผู้ก่อตั้ง Peercoin ซันนี่คิง Primecoin เป็นสกุลเงินดิจิทัลตัวแรกที่มีระบบพิสูจน์การทำงานและใช้งานได้จริง สกุลเงินดิจิทัลก่อนหน้านี้ เช่น Bitcoin ถูกขุดโดยใช้อัลกอริธึมที่แก้ปัญหาทางคณิตศาสตร์ตามอำเภอใจ ผลลัพธ์ที่ไม่มีค่าหรือใช้นอกเหนือจากการขุด cryptocurrency เอง อย่างไรก็ตาม อัลกอริธึมของ Primecoin ได้คำนวณ chains ของจำนวนเฉพาะ (Cunningham และ bi-twin chains) ซึ่งผลลัพธ์ที่ได้เผยแพร่ในบัญชีแยกประเภทสาธารณะของ blockchain พร้อมใช้งาน โดยนักวิทยาศาสตร์ นักคณิตศาสตร์ และคนอื่นๆ การใช้ระบบพิสูจน์การทำงานในการคำนวณจำนวนเฉพาะเป็นนวัตกรรมที่สร้างผลลัพธ์ที่เป็นประโยชน์ในขณะเดียวกันก็เป็นไปตามเกณฑ์สำหรับระบบการพิสูจน์การทำงานด้วย ได...
published: 18 Jan 2021
-
Alexander O´Connor: Linked Data and the Semantic Web - Making Human Knowledge Programmable
This video was recorded during The Humanities and Technology Camp (THATCamp) 2014 at the Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities. The production of the videos was supported by the EU-funded FOSTER (Facilitate Open Science Training for European Research) programme. The series of 6 videos cover the following topics:
Open Humanities (open access, open data, open standards and open attitude)
Open History (a specific session dedicated to openness for historians)
Open Humanities Data (data sharing, licensing, linked data technologies and the semantic web)
Open Access for Digital Arts and Humanities in Europe (Open Access repositories and innovative types of publication platforms for the arts and humanities)
For more information see: http://goettingen2014.thatcamp.org/
published: 15 Jun 2015
-
Edmund Waller (disambiguation) Top #8 Facts
published: 28 Jan 2016
-
Video Lecture 397: Pope's Rape of the Lock (Part-VII) by Arindam Ghosh
The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic narrative poem written by Alexander Pope. One of the most commonly cited examples of high burlesque, it was first published anonymously in Lintot's Miscellaneous Poems and Translations (May 1712) in two cantos (334 lines); a revised edition "Written by Mr. Pope" followed in March 1714 as a five-canto version (794 lines) accompanied by six engravings. Pope boasted that this sold more than three thousand copies in its first four days. The final form of the poem appeared in 1717 with the addition of Clarissa's speech on good humour. The poem was much translated and contributed to the growing popularity of mock-heroic in Europe.
published: 24 Oct 2021
-
Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga xxonMobil Open 2017 - Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga
Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga xxonMobil Open 2017 - Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga
Qatar ExxonMobil Open
qatar exxonmobil open 2017
qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2016
qatar exxonmobil open 2017 dates
qatar exxonmobil open wiki
qatar exxonmobil open 2017 ticket
qatar exxonmobil open 2014
qatar exxonmobil open 2015
qatar exxonmobil open 2013
qatar exxonmobil open 2014 schedule
atp qatar exxonmobil open
2016 qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2017
qatar exxonmobil open doha
qatar exxonmobil open schedule
finalists at qatar exxonmobil open
tennis qatar exxonmobil open
doha tennis tournament qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2016 quarter finals
qatar exxonmobil open 2016 final results
qatar exxonmobil open
qatar open - tennis
qatar exxonmobil open
qat...
published: 04 Jan 2017
-
Psalms Nr. 70
The Book of Psalms, King James Bible, by Alexander Scourby
"Psalm", "Psalmody", and "Tehilim" redirect here. For the wine grape variety, see Psalmody (grape). For the Hebrew film, see Tehilim (film). For other uses, see Psalm (disambiguation).
The Book of Psalms (/sɑːmz/ or /sɔː(l)mz/ SAW(L)MZ; Hebrew: תְּהִלִּים, Tehillim, lit. "praises"), commonly referred to simply as Psalms, the Psalter or "the Psalms", is the first book of the Ketuvim ("Writings"), the third section of the Tanakh, and a book of the Christian Old Testament.[1] The title is derived from the Greek translation, ψαλμοί (psalmoi), meaning "instrumental music" and, by extension, "the words accompanying the music".[2] The book is an anthology of individual Hebrew psalms, with 150 in the Jewish and Western Christian traditi...
published: 04 Sep 2021
-
Skanderbeg And Dukagjin - The Serbian Rulers Of Albania
#Skanderbeg #Illyria #Serbia #History
0:00:00 Who are the Dukadzins?
0:01:53 Who is Leka Dukadzin?
0:02:51 Origins of the Kanun
0:06:16 Besa Etymology
0:08:49 Olsi Jazexhi On Skanderbeg
0:11:06 Charter of Jovan Kastriot To Hilandar
0:11:54 Arbanas Pirg
0:15:53 J.G Von Hahn On Skanderbeg
0:16:43 Mavro Orbini And Other Sources
0:20:02 Origin Of Skanderbeg's Coat of Arms
0:23:24 Shqiptar Etymology
0:24:41 Prospero Petronio On The Dukadzins
0:25:28 Names of Dukadzin Family Members
0:27:08 Dukadzinovic And Kastriotic Coats Of Arms
0:31:24 Jovan Muzaka's Expositions
0:36:47 Dukadzin Etymology
0:38:36 Genealogy of Dukadzins
0:52:46 Dušman Family
0:53:18 League of Lješ
0:54:25 Vrana Konti
0:54:57 Skanderbeg And Dukadzins
01:07:36 Castle of Servolo
01:08:38 Leka Dukadzin's Return To Alba...
published: 11 Apr 2021
-
Sasanian Persia Historical Overview
In this video, I look at the history of the Sasanian Persian empire from 224-651. I look at key figures and events from that time.
published: 27 Sep 2017
-
Nathaniel Hooke
If you find our videos helpful you can support us by buying something from amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/?tag=wiki-audio-20
Nathaniel Hooke
☆Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
image source in video
published: 31 Dec 2015
-
Video Lecture 401: Rape of the Lock (Last Part) by Arindam Ghosh
The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic narrative poem written by Alexander Pope. One of the most commonly cited examples of high burlesque, it was first published anonymously in Lintot's Miscellaneous Poems and Translations (May 1712) in two cantos (334 lines); a revised edition "Written by Mr. Pope" followed in March 1714 as a five-canto version (794 lines) accompanied by six engravings. Pope boasted that this sold more than three thousand copies in its first four days. The final form of the poem appeared in 1717 with the addition of Clarissa's speech on good humour. The poem was much translated and contributed to the growing popularity of mock-heroic in Europe.
published: 26 Oct 2021
-
Data Management best practice for Adult & Community Learning Provision
Data Management best practice: ILR, audit and inspection
A practical guide to best practice data management for ILR, audit and inspection. Understand the common pitfalls, pick up tips for 'getting it right', and gain insight into what inspectors and auditors are looking for.
published: 08 Nov 2017
-
A talk: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Euphemization and Derogation in E mails on the Late Pope
Produced by Cameen Kettanun
School of Humanities and Tourism Management
Bangkok University
Thailand
published: 05 Sep 2014
1:11
Age of reason (disambiguation)
Video Software we use: https://amzn.to/2KpdCQF
Ad-free videos.
You can support us by purchasing something through our Amazon-Url, thanks :)
Age of reason may r...
Video Software we use: https://amzn.to/2KpdCQF
Ad-free videos.
You can support us by purchasing something through our Amazon-Url, thanks :)
Age of reason may refer to: 17th-century philosophy, as a successor of the Renaissance and a predecessor to the Age of Enlightenment.Age of Enlightenment in its long form of 1600–1800.The Age of Reason, a book by Thomas Paine.Age of Reason , a 1988 album by John Farnham "Age of Reason" , a song by John Farnham .
This channel is dedicated to make Wikipedia, one of the biggest knowledge databases in the world available to people with limited vision.
Article available under a Creative Commons license
Image source in video
https://wn.com/Age_Of_Reason_(Disambiguation)
Video Software we use: https://amzn.to/2KpdCQF
Ad-free videos.
You can support us by purchasing something through our Amazon-Url, thanks :)
Age of reason may refer to: 17th-century philosophy, as a successor of the Renaissance and a predecessor to the Age of Enlightenment.Age of Enlightenment in its long form of 1600–1800.The Age of Reason, a book by Thomas Paine.Age of Reason , a 1988 album by John Farnham "Age of Reason" , a song by John Farnham .
This channel is dedicated to make Wikipedia, one of the biggest knowledge databases in the world available to people with limited vision.
Article available under a Creative Commons license
Image source in video
- published: 16 Sep 2016
- views: 17
20:13
Alexander
Primecoin (สัญลักษณ์: Ψ; รหัส: XPM) เป็นสกุลเงินดิจิทัลที่ใช้ระบบพิสูจน์การทำงานที่ค้นหากลุ่มของจำนวนเฉพาะ
เปิดตัวเมื่อวันที่ 7 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2556 โดยแฮ็กเกอร์น...
Primecoin (สัญลักษณ์: Ψ; รหัส: XPM) เป็นสกุลเงินดิจิทัลที่ใช้ระบบพิสูจน์การทำงานที่ค้นหากลุ่มของจำนวนเฉพาะ
เปิดตัวเมื่อวันที่ 7 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2556 โดยแฮ็กเกอร์นิรนามและผู้ก่อตั้ง Peercoin ซันนี่คิง Primecoin เป็นสกุลเงินดิจิทัลตัวแรกที่มีระบบพิสูจน์การทำงานและใช้งานได้จริง สกุลเงินดิจิทัลก่อนหน้านี้ เช่น Bitcoin ถูกขุดโดยใช้อัลกอริธึมที่แก้ปัญหาทางคณิตศาสตร์ตามอำเภอใจ ผลลัพธ์ที่ไม่มีค่าหรือใช้นอกเหนือจากการขุด cryptocurrency เอง อย่างไรก็ตาม อัลกอริธึมของ Primecoin ได้คำนวณ chains ของจำนวนเฉพาะ (Cunningham และ bi-twin chains) ซึ่งผลลัพธ์ที่ได้เผยแพร่ในบัญชีแยกประเภทสาธารณะของ blockchain พร้อมใช้งาน โดยนักวิทยาศาสตร์ นักคณิตศาสตร์ และคนอื่นๆ การใช้ระบบพิสูจน์การทำงานในการคำนวณจำนวนเฉพาะเป็นนวัตกรรมที่สร้างผลลัพธ์ที่เป็นประโยชน์ในขณะเดียวกันก็เป็นไปตามเกณฑ์สำหรับระบบการพิสูจน์การทำงานด้วย ได้แก่ การคำนวณที่ ดำเนินการได้ยากแต่ตรวจสอบได้ง่าย และปรับความยากได้ #primecoin #xpm $XPM
https://primecoin.io
https://wn.com/Alexander
Primecoin (สัญลักษณ์: Ψ; รหัส: XPM) เป็นสกุลเงินดิจิทัลที่ใช้ระบบพิสูจน์การทำงานที่ค้นหากลุ่มของจำนวนเฉพาะ
เปิดตัวเมื่อวันที่ 7 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2556 โดยแฮ็กเกอร์นิรนามและผู้ก่อตั้ง Peercoin ซันนี่คิง Primecoin เป็นสกุลเงินดิจิทัลตัวแรกที่มีระบบพิสูจน์การทำงานและใช้งานได้จริง สกุลเงินดิจิทัลก่อนหน้านี้ เช่น Bitcoin ถูกขุดโดยใช้อัลกอริธึมที่แก้ปัญหาทางคณิตศาสตร์ตามอำเภอใจ ผลลัพธ์ที่ไม่มีค่าหรือใช้นอกเหนือจากการขุด cryptocurrency เอง อย่างไรก็ตาม อัลกอริธึมของ Primecoin ได้คำนวณ chains ของจำนวนเฉพาะ (Cunningham และ bi-twin chains) ซึ่งผลลัพธ์ที่ได้เผยแพร่ในบัญชีแยกประเภทสาธารณะของ blockchain พร้อมใช้งาน โดยนักวิทยาศาสตร์ นักคณิตศาสตร์ และคนอื่นๆ การใช้ระบบพิสูจน์การทำงานในการคำนวณจำนวนเฉพาะเป็นนวัตกรรมที่สร้างผลลัพธ์ที่เป็นประโยชน์ในขณะเดียวกันก็เป็นไปตามเกณฑ์สำหรับระบบการพิสูจน์การทำงานด้วย ได้แก่ การคำนวณที่ ดำเนินการได้ยากแต่ตรวจสอบได้ง่าย และปรับความยากได้ #primecoin #xpm $XPM
https://primecoin.io
- published: 18 Jan 2021
- views: 0
51:33
Alexander O´Connor: Linked Data and the Semantic Web - Making Human Knowledge Programmable
This video was recorded during The Humanities and Technology Camp (THATCamp) 2014 at the Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities. The production of the videos w...
This video was recorded during The Humanities and Technology Camp (THATCamp) 2014 at the Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities. The production of the videos was supported by the EU-funded FOSTER (Facilitate Open Science Training for European Research) programme. The series of 6 videos cover the following topics:
Open Humanities (open access, open data, open standards and open attitude)
Open History (a specific session dedicated to openness for historians)
Open Humanities Data (data sharing, licensing, linked data technologies and the semantic web)
Open Access for Digital Arts and Humanities in Europe (Open Access repositories and innovative types of publication platforms for the arts and humanities)
For more information see: http://goettingen2014.thatcamp.org/
https://wn.com/Alexander_O´Connor_Linked_Data_And_The_Semantic_Web_Making_Human_Knowledge_Programmable
This video was recorded during The Humanities and Technology Camp (THATCamp) 2014 at the Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities. The production of the videos was supported by the EU-funded FOSTER (Facilitate Open Science Training for European Research) programme. The series of 6 videos cover the following topics:
Open Humanities (open access, open data, open standards and open attitude)
Open History (a specific session dedicated to openness for historians)
Open Humanities Data (data sharing, licensing, linked data technologies and the semantic web)
Open Access for Digital Arts and Humanities in Europe (Open Access repositories and innovative types of publication platforms for the arts and humanities)
For more information see: http://goettingen2014.thatcamp.org/
- published: 15 Jun 2015
- views: 348
1:07:24
Video Lecture 397: Pope's Rape of the Lock (Part-VII) by Arindam Ghosh
The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic narrative poem written by Alexander Pope. One of the most commonly cited examples of high burlesque, it was first publishe...
The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic narrative poem written by Alexander Pope. One of the most commonly cited examples of high burlesque, it was first published anonymously in Lintot's Miscellaneous Poems and Translations (May 1712) in two cantos (334 lines); a revised edition "Written by Mr. Pope" followed in March 1714 as a five-canto version (794 lines) accompanied by six engravings. Pope boasted that this sold more than three thousand copies in its first four days. The final form of the poem appeared in 1717 with the addition of Clarissa's speech on good humour. The poem was much translated and contributed to the growing popularity of mock-heroic in Europe.
https://wn.com/Video_Lecture_397_Pope's_Rape_Of_The_Lock_(Part_Vii)_By_Arindam_Ghosh
The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic narrative poem written by Alexander Pope. One of the most commonly cited examples of high burlesque, it was first published anonymously in Lintot's Miscellaneous Poems and Translations (May 1712) in two cantos (334 lines); a revised edition "Written by Mr. Pope" followed in March 1714 as a five-canto version (794 lines) accompanied by six engravings. Pope boasted that this sold more than three thousand copies in its first four days. The final form of the poem appeared in 1717 with the addition of Clarissa's speech on good humour. The poem was much translated and contributed to the growing popularity of mock-heroic in Europe.
- published: 24 Oct 2021
- views: 86
18:57
Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga xxonMobil Open 2017 - Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga
Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga xxonMobil Open 2017 - Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga
Qatar ExxonMobil Open
qatar exxonmobil open 2017
qatar exxonmobil ...
Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga xxonMobil Open 2017 - Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga
Qatar ExxonMobil Open
qatar exxonmobil open 2017
qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2016
qatar exxonmobil open 2017 dates
qatar exxonmobil open wiki
qatar exxonmobil open 2017 ticket
qatar exxonmobil open 2014
qatar exxonmobil open 2015
qatar exxonmobil open 2013
qatar exxonmobil open 2014 schedule
atp qatar exxonmobil open
2016 qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2017
qatar exxonmobil open doha
qatar exxonmobil open schedule
finalists at qatar exxonmobil open
tennis qatar exxonmobil open
doha tennis tournament qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2016 quarter finals
qatar exxonmobil open 2016 final results
qatar exxonmobil open
qatar open - tennis
qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2016
qatar exxonmobil open 2016 live
qatar exxonmobil open 2016 tv schedule
qatar exxonmobil open 2015
qatar exxonmobil open 2017
dustin brown hockey
dustin brown tennis
dustin brown contract
dustin brown kings
dustin brown stats
dustin brown captain
dustin brown jersey
dustin brown nhl
dustin brown water bottle fail
dustin brown stanley cup
dustin brown kings jersey
dustin brown jersey
dustin brown shirt
dustin brown womens jersey
dustin brown hockey card
dustin brown signed puck
dustin brown nhl jersey
dustin brown puck
dustin brown bobblehead
dustin brown autograph
dustin brown la kings
dustin brown wife
dustin brown tennis girlfriend
dustin brown highlights
dustin brown hits
dustin brown vs nadal
dustin brown hit on sedin
dustin brown hockey
dustin brown vs federer
dustin brown interview
dustin brown practice
dustin brown vs gael monfils
dustin brown - tennis
dustin brown (tennis)
dustin brown (disambiguation)
dustin browder
tennis dustin brown
wiki dustin brown
dustin brown
dustin brown - tennis
dustin brown
jo wilfried tsonga
tsonga jo wilfried
Jo Wilfried Tsonga
dustin brown hockey
dustin brown tennis
dustin brown contract
dustin brown kings
dustin brown water bottle fail
dustin brown stanley cup
jo wilfried tsonga poster
jo-wilfried tsonga wife
tennis jo wilfried tsonga
jo-wilfried tsonga girlfriend
jo wilfried tsonga australian open
jo wilfried tsonga shoe size
jo wilfried tsonga height
jo wilfried tsonga 2016
jo wilfried tsonga ball girl
https://wn.com/Dustin_Brown_Vs_Jo_Wilfried_Tsonga_Xxonmobil_Open_2017_Dustin_Brown_Vs_Jo_Wilfried_Tsonga
Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga xxonMobil Open 2017 - Dustin Brown vs Jo Wilfried Tsonga
Qatar ExxonMobil Open
qatar exxonmobil open 2017
qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2016
qatar exxonmobil open 2017 dates
qatar exxonmobil open wiki
qatar exxonmobil open 2017 ticket
qatar exxonmobil open 2014
qatar exxonmobil open 2015
qatar exxonmobil open 2013
qatar exxonmobil open 2014 schedule
atp qatar exxonmobil open
2016 qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2017
qatar exxonmobil open doha
qatar exxonmobil open schedule
finalists at qatar exxonmobil open
tennis qatar exxonmobil open
doha tennis tournament qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2016 quarter finals
qatar exxonmobil open 2016 final results
qatar exxonmobil open
qatar open - tennis
qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open
qatar exxonmobil open 2016
qatar exxonmobil open 2016 live
qatar exxonmobil open 2016 tv schedule
qatar exxonmobil open 2015
qatar exxonmobil open 2017
dustin brown hockey
dustin brown tennis
dustin brown contract
dustin brown kings
dustin brown stats
dustin brown captain
dustin brown jersey
dustin brown nhl
dustin brown water bottle fail
dustin brown stanley cup
dustin brown kings jersey
dustin brown jersey
dustin brown shirt
dustin brown womens jersey
dustin brown hockey card
dustin brown signed puck
dustin brown nhl jersey
dustin brown puck
dustin brown bobblehead
dustin brown autograph
dustin brown la kings
dustin brown wife
dustin brown tennis girlfriend
dustin brown highlights
dustin brown hits
dustin brown vs nadal
dustin brown hit on sedin
dustin brown hockey
dustin brown vs federer
dustin brown interview
dustin brown practice
dustin brown vs gael monfils
dustin brown - tennis
dustin brown (tennis)
dustin brown (disambiguation)
dustin browder
tennis dustin brown
wiki dustin brown
dustin brown
dustin brown - tennis
dustin brown
jo wilfried tsonga
tsonga jo wilfried
Jo Wilfried Tsonga
dustin brown hockey
dustin brown tennis
dustin brown contract
dustin brown kings
dustin brown water bottle fail
dustin brown stanley cup
jo wilfried tsonga poster
jo-wilfried tsonga wife
tennis jo wilfried tsonga
jo-wilfried tsonga girlfriend
jo wilfried tsonga australian open
jo wilfried tsonga shoe size
jo wilfried tsonga height
jo wilfried tsonga 2016
jo wilfried tsonga ball girl
- published: 04 Jan 2017
- views: 16014
0:44
Psalms Nr. 70
The Book of Psalms, King James Bible, by Alexander Scourby
"Psalm", "Psalmody", and "Tehilim" redirect here. For the wine grape variety, see Psalmody (grape). ...
The Book of Psalms, King James Bible, by Alexander Scourby
"Psalm", "Psalmody", and "Tehilim" redirect here. For the wine grape variety, see Psalmody (grape). For the Hebrew film, see Tehilim (film). For other uses, see Psalm (disambiguation).
The Book of Psalms (/sɑːmz/ or /sɔː(l)mz/ SAW(L)MZ; Hebrew: תְּהִלִּים, Tehillim, lit. "praises"), commonly referred to simply as Psalms, the Psalter or "the Psalms", is the first book of the Ketuvim ("Writings"), the third section of the Tanakh, and a book of the Christian Old Testament.[1] The title is derived from the Greek translation, ψαλμοί (psalmoi), meaning "instrumental music" and, by extension, "the words accompanying the music".[2] The book is an anthology of individual Hebrew psalms, with 150 in the Jewish and Western Christian tradition and more in the Eastern Christian churches.[3][4] Many are linked to the name of David, but modern scholarship rejects his authorship, instead placing the composition of the psalms to various authors writing between the 9th and 5th centuries BC.[4]
Many psalms (116 of the 150) have individual superscriptions (titles), ranging from lengthy comments to a single word. Over a third appear to be musical directions, addressed to the "leader" or "choirmaster", including such statements as "with stringed instruments" and "according to lilies". Others appear to be references to types of musical composition, such as "A psalm" and "Song", or directions regarding the occasion for using the psalm ("On the dedication of the temple", "For the memorial offering", etc.). Many carry the names of individuals, the most common (73 psalms—75 if including the two Psalms attributed by the New Testament to David) being 'of David', and thirteen of these relate explicitly to incidents in the king's life.[6] Others named include Asaph (12), the sons of Korah (11), Solomon (2), Moses (1), Ethan the Ezrahite (1), and Heman the Ezrahite (1). The Septuagint, the Peshitta (the Syriac Vulgate), and the Latin Vulgate each associate several Psalms (such as 111 and 145) with Haggai and Zechariah. The Septuagint also attributes several Psalms (like 112 and 135) to Ezekiel and Jeremiah.
Psalms are usually identified by a sequence number, often preceded by the abbreviation "Ps." Numbering of the Psalms differs—mostly by one—between the Hebrew (Masoretic) and Greek (Septuagint) manuscripts. Protestant translations (Lutheran, Anglican, Calvinist) use the Hebrew numbering, but other Christian traditions vary:
The variance between Masorah and Septuagint texts in this numeration is likely enough due to a gradual neglect of the original poetic form of the Psalms; such neglect was occasioned by liturgical uses and carelessness of copyists. It is generally admitted that Psalms 9 and 10 (Hebrew numbering) were originally a single acrostic poem, wrongly separated by Massorah and rightly united by the Septuagint and the Vulgate.[8] Psalms 42 and 43 (Hebrew numbering) are shown by identity of subject (yearning for the house of Yahweh), of metrical structure and of refrain (comparing Psalms 42:6, 12; 43:5, Hebrew numbering), to be three strophes of one and the same poem. The Hebrew text is correct in counting as one Psalm 146 and Psalm 147. Later liturgical usage would seem to have split up these and several other psalms. Zenner combines into what he deems were the original choral odes: Psalms 1, 2, 3, 4; 6 + 13; 9 + 10; 19, 20, 21; 56 + 57; 69 + 70; 114 + 115; 148, 149, 150.[9] A choral ode would seem to have been the original form of Psalms 14 and 70. The two strophes and the epode are Psalm 14; the two antistrophes are Psalm 70.[10] It is noteworthy that, on the breaking up of the original ode, each portion crept twice into the Psalter: Psalm 14 = 53, Psalm 70 = 40:14–18. Other such duplicated portions of psalms are Psalm 108:2–6 = Psalm 57:8–12; Psalm 108:7–14 = Psalm 60:7–14; Psalm 71:1–3 = Psalm 31:2–4. This loss of the original form of some of the psalms is allowed by the Biblical Commission (1 May 1910) to have been due to liturgical practices, neglect by copyists, or other causes.
Verse numbers were first printed in 1509.[11][12] Different traditions exist whether to include the original heading into the counting or not. This leads to inconsistent numbering in 62 psalms, with an offset of 1, sometimes even 2 verses.[13]
Thanks for watching! If you know someone who could use this video, share it with them!
https://wn.com/Psalms_Nr._70
The Book of Psalms, King James Bible, by Alexander Scourby
"Psalm", "Psalmody", and "Tehilim" redirect here. For the wine grape variety, see Psalmody (grape). For the Hebrew film, see Tehilim (film). For other uses, see Psalm (disambiguation).
The Book of Psalms (/sɑːmz/ or /sɔː(l)mz/ SAW(L)MZ; Hebrew: תְּהִלִּים, Tehillim, lit. "praises"), commonly referred to simply as Psalms, the Psalter or "the Psalms", is the first book of the Ketuvim ("Writings"), the third section of the Tanakh, and a book of the Christian Old Testament.[1] The title is derived from the Greek translation, ψαλμοί (psalmoi), meaning "instrumental music" and, by extension, "the words accompanying the music".[2] The book is an anthology of individual Hebrew psalms, with 150 in the Jewish and Western Christian tradition and more in the Eastern Christian churches.[3][4] Many are linked to the name of David, but modern scholarship rejects his authorship, instead placing the composition of the psalms to various authors writing between the 9th and 5th centuries BC.[4]
Many psalms (116 of the 150) have individual superscriptions (titles), ranging from lengthy comments to a single word. Over a third appear to be musical directions, addressed to the "leader" or "choirmaster", including such statements as "with stringed instruments" and "according to lilies". Others appear to be references to types of musical composition, such as "A psalm" and "Song", or directions regarding the occasion for using the psalm ("On the dedication of the temple", "For the memorial offering", etc.). Many carry the names of individuals, the most common (73 psalms—75 if including the two Psalms attributed by the New Testament to David) being 'of David', and thirteen of these relate explicitly to incidents in the king's life.[6] Others named include Asaph (12), the sons of Korah (11), Solomon (2), Moses (1), Ethan the Ezrahite (1), and Heman the Ezrahite (1). The Septuagint, the Peshitta (the Syriac Vulgate), and the Latin Vulgate each associate several Psalms (such as 111 and 145) with Haggai and Zechariah. The Septuagint also attributes several Psalms (like 112 and 135) to Ezekiel and Jeremiah.
Psalms are usually identified by a sequence number, often preceded by the abbreviation "Ps." Numbering of the Psalms differs—mostly by one—between the Hebrew (Masoretic) and Greek (Septuagint) manuscripts. Protestant translations (Lutheran, Anglican, Calvinist) use the Hebrew numbering, but other Christian traditions vary:
The variance between Masorah and Septuagint texts in this numeration is likely enough due to a gradual neglect of the original poetic form of the Psalms; such neglect was occasioned by liturgical uses and carelessness of copyists. It is generally admitted that Psalms 9 and 10 (Hebrew numbering) were originally a single acrostic poem, wrongly separated by Massorah and rightly united by the Septuagint and the Vulgate.[8] Psalms 42 and 43 (Hebrew numbering) are shown by identity of subject (yearning for the house of Yahweh), of metrical structure and of refrain (comparing Psalms 42:6, 12; 43:5, Hebrew numbering), to be three strophes of one and the same poem. The Hebrew text is correct in counting as one Psalm 146 and Psalm 147. Later liturgical usage would seem to have split up these and several other psalms. Zenner combines into what he deems were the original choral odes: Psalms 1, 2, 3, 4; 6 + 13; 9 + 10; 19, 20, 21; 56 + 57; 69 + 70; 114 + 115; 148, 149, 150.[9] A choral ode would seem to have been the original form of Psalms 14 and 70. The two strophes and the epode are Psalm 14; the two antistrophes are Psalm 70.[10] It is noteworthy that, on the breaking up of the original ode, each portion crept twice into the Psalter: Psalm 14 = 53, Psalm 70 = 40:14–18. Other such duplicated portions of psalms are Psalm 108:2–6 = Psalm 57:8–12; Psalm 108:7–14 = Psalm 60:7–14; Psalm 71:1–3 = Psalm 31:2–4. This loss of the original form of some of the psalms is allowed by the Biblical Commission (1 May 1910) to have been due to liturgical practices, neglect by copyists, or other causes.
Verse numbers were first printed in 1509.[11][12] Different traditions exist whether to include the original heading into the counting or not. This leads to inconsistent numbering in 62 psalms, with an offset of 1, sometimes even 2 verses.[13]
Thanks for watching! If you know someone who could use this video, share it with them!
- published: 04 Sep 2021
- views: 1
1:11:56
Skanderbeg And Dukagjin - The Serbian Rulers Of Albania
#Skanderbeg #Illyria #Serbia #History
0:00:00 Who are the Dukadzins?
0:01:53 Who is Leka Dukadzin?
0:02:51 Origins of the Kanun
0:06:16 Besa Etymology
0:08:49...
#Skanderbeg #Illyria #Serbia #History
0:00:00 Who are the Dukadzins?
0:01:53 Who is Leka Dukadzin?
0:02:51 Origins of the Kanun
0:06:16 Besa Etymology
0:08:49 Olsi Jazexhi On Skanderbeg
0:11:06 Charter of Jovan Kastriot To Hilandar
0:11:54 Arbanas Pirg
0:15:53 J.G Von Hahn On Skanderbeg
0:16:43 Mavro Orbini And Other Sources
0:20:02 Origin Of Skanderbeg's Coat of Arms
0:23:24 Shqiptar Etymology
0:24:41 Prospero Petronio On The Dukadzins
0:25:28 Names of Dukadzin Family Members
0:27:08 Dukadzinovic And Kastriotic Coats Of Arms
0:31:24 Jovan Muzaka's Expositions
0:36:47 Dukadzin Etymology
0:38:36 Genealogy of Dukadzins
0:52:46 Dušman Family
0:53:18 League of Lješ
0:54:25 Vrana Konti
0:54:57 Skanderbeg And Dukadzins
01:07:36 Castle of Servolo
01:08:38 Leka Dukadzin's Return To
Albania
01:09:26 The Fate Of The Dukadzins
01:10:22 Bjelopavlic Tribe
The most famous individual from the Kastriotic Family was an individual known as Djuradj Kastriotic "Skanderbeg". Skanderbeg is a very well known and famous individual , having been a successful military leader and warrior who faught against the Ottoman Turks. The Dukadzinovics commonly known as Dukagjini today, were also nobles who resided in what is today's northern Albania and certain members of that family were well and truly united with the Skanderbeg, having fought alongside Skanderbeg on the battlefield against the invading Ottoman forces.
Both the Kastriotics and Dukadzinovics are one of the oldest noble families in Albania who lived especially in the 14-15th centuries.
One of the most prominent members of the Dukadzin family, is an individual called Leka Dukadzin, or more commonly know as Leke Dukagjini among the Shqiptar Albanians.
Leka Dukadzin or Leke Dukagjini is said to have comprised a set of rules and laws, that regulated the lives of inhabitants across the regions of north Albania. We will be taking a look at the origins of these laws and uncovering more of the mystery behind the so called-Leke Dukagjini as well as his kanun.
There is much confusion and doubt about their origins and the aim of this video is to uncover the mystery of their origins, by factually showing and documenting their true origins based on primary sources.
We will observe how the Austro-Hungarian historians especially individuals like Lajos Thalloczy, Benjamin Von Kallay, J.G Von Hahn fabricated and falsified history to suit the geopolitical goals of the Austro-Hungarian empire.
We will take a deeper look in to the ethnic origin of Skanderbeg, as well as investigate other members of his family. We will investigate and convey the genealogy of the Dukadzins, using sources from the Venetians Archives and comparing them with Jovan Muzaka's account as well as Karl Hopf's genealogical tree.
Also, in this video, we explore the etymology of the word "Shqiptar", as well as the etymology of the name "Dukadzin".
The aim of this episode is to factually convey the true origins of Skanderbeg and Dukadzin as well as to factually convey the events that took place during their lifetime.
https://wn.com/Skanderbeg_And_Dukagjin_The_Serbian_Rulers_Of_Albania
#Skanderbeg #Illyria #Serbia #History
0:00:00 Who are the Dukadzins?
0:01:53 Who is Leka Dukadzin?
0:02:51 Origins of the Kanun
0:06:16 Besa Etymology
0:08:49 Olsi Jazexhi On Skanderbeg
0:11:06 Charter of Jovan Kastriot To Hilandar
0:11:54 Arbanas Pirg
0:15:53 J.G Von Hahn On Skanderbeg
0:16:43 Mavro Orbini And Other Sources
0:20:02 Origin Of Skanderbeg's Coat of Arms
0:23:24 Shqiptar Etymology
0:24:41 Prospero Petronio On The Dukadzins
0:25:28 Names of Dukadzin Family Members
0:27:08 Dukadzinovic And Kastriotic Coats Of Arms
0:31:24 Jovan Muzaka's Expositions
0:36:47 Dukadzin Etymology
0:38:36 Genealogy of Dukadzins
0:52:46 Dušman Family
0:53:18 League of Lješ
0:54:25 Vrana Konti
0:54:57 Skanderbeg And Dukadzins
01:07:36 Castle of Servolo
01:08:38 Leka Dukadzin's Return To
Albania
01:09:26 The Fate Of The Dukadzins
01:10:22 Bjelopavlic Tribe
The most famous individual from the Kastriotic Family was an individual known as Djuradj Kastriotic "Skanderbeg". Skanderbeg is a very well known and famous individual , having been a successful military leader and warrior who faught against the Ottoman Turks. The Dukadzinovics commonly known as Dukagjini today, were also nobles who resided in what is today's northern Albania and certain members of that family were well and truly united with the Skanderbeg, having fought alongside Skanderbeg on the battlefield against the invading Ottoman forces.
Both the Kastriotics and Dukadzinovics are one of the oldest noble families in Albania who lived especially in the 14-15th centuries.
One of the most prominent members of the Dukadzin family, is an individual called Leka Dukadzin, or more commonly know as Leke Dukagjini among the Shqiptar Albanians.
Leka Dukadzin or Leke Dukagjini is said to have comprised a set of rules and laws, that regulated the lives of inhabitants across the regions of north Albania. We will be taking a look at the origins of these laws and uncovering more of the mystery behind the so called-Leke Dukagjini as well as his kanun.
There is much confusion and doubt about their origins and the aim of this video is to uncover the mystery of their origins, by factually showing and documenting their true origins based on primary sources.
We will observe how the Austro-Hungarian historians especially individuals like Lajos Thalloczy, Benjamin Von Kallay, J.G Von Hahn fabricated and falsified history to suit the geopolitical goals of the Austro-Hungarian empire.
We will take a deeper look in to the ethnic origin of Skanderbeg, as well as investigate other members of his family. We will investigate and convey the genealogy of the Dukadzins, using sources from the Venetians Archives and comparing them with Jovan Muzaka's account as well as Karl Hopf's genealogical tree.
Also, in this video, we explore the etymology of the word "Shqiptar", as well as the etymology of the name "Dukadzin".
The aim of this episode is to factually convey the true origins of Skanderbeg and Dukadzin as well as to factually convey the events that took place during their lifetime.
- published: 11 Apr 2021
- views: 7579
28:30
Sasanian Persia Historical Overview
In this video, I look at the history of the Sasanian Persian empire from 224-651. I look at key figures and events from that time.
In this video, I look at the history of the Sasanian Persian empire from 224-651. I look at key figures and events from that time.
https://wn.com/Sasanian_Persia_Historical_Overview
In this video, I look at the history of the Sasanian Persian empire from 224-651. I look at key figures and events from that time.
- published: 27 Sep 2017
- views: 17459
5:56
Nathaniel Hooke
If you find our videos helpful you can support us by buying something from amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/?tag=wiki-audio-20
Nathaniel Hooke
☆Video is target...
If you find our videos helpful you can support us by buying something from amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/?tag=wiki-audio-20
Nathaniel Hooke
☆Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
image source in video
https://wn.com/Nathaniel_Hooke
If you find our videos helpful you can support us by buying something from amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/?tag=wiki-audio-20
Nathaniel Hooke
☆Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
image source in video
- published: 31 Dec 2015
- views: 9
47:00
Video Lecture 401: Rape of the Lock (Last Part) by Arindam Ghosh
The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic narrative poem written by Alexander Pope. One of the most commonly cited examples of high burlesque, it was first publishe...
The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic narrative poem written by Alexander Pope. One of the most commonly cited examples of high burlesque, it was first published anonymously in Lintot's Miscellaneous Poems and Translations (May 1712) in two cantos (334 lines); a revised edition "Written by Mr. Pope" followed in March 1714 as a five-canto version (794 lines) accompanied by six engravings. Pope boasted that this sold more than three thousand copies in its first four days. The final form of the poem appeared in 1717 with the addition of Clarissa's speech on good humour. The poem was much translated and contributed to the growing popularity of mock-heroic in Europe.
https://wn.com/Video_Lecture_401_Rape_Of_The_Lock_(Last_Part)_By_Arindam_Ghosh
The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic narrative poem written by Alexander Pope. One of the most commonly cited examples of high burlesque, it was first published anonymously in Lintot's Miscellaneous Poems and Translations (May 1712) in two cantos (334 lines); a revised edition "Written by Mr. Pope" followed in March 1714 as a five-canto version (794 lines) accompanied by six engravings. Pope boasted that this sold more than three thousand copies in its first four days. The final form of the poem appeared in 1717 with the addition of Clarissa's speech on good humour. The poem was much translated and contributed to the growing popularity of mock-heroic in Europe.
- published: 26 Oct 2021
- views: 114
54:12
Data Management best practice for Adult & Community Learning Provision
Data Management best practice: ILR, audit and inspection
A practical guide to best practice data management for ILR, audit and inspection. Understand the commo...
Data Management best practice: ILR, audit and inspection
A practical guide to best practice data management for ILR, audit and inspection. Understand the common pitfalls, pick up tips for 'getting it right', and gain insight into what inspectors and auditors are looking for.
https://wn.com/Data_Management_Best_Practice_For_Adult_Community_Learning_Provision
Data Management best practice: ILR, audit and inspection
A practical guide to best practice data management for ILR, audit and inspection. Understand the common pitfalls, pick up tips for 'getting it right', and gain insight into what inspectors and auditors are looking for.
- published: 08 Nov 2017
- views: 92
-
Alexander Pope's ESSAY ON CRITICISM -- A FrenchQuarterLit.com presentation by actor Louis Blois
English poet Alexander Pope was born in 1688, during the Enlightenment era. He lived in a time marked by political turmoil and rebellion. Several of his poems remain classics to this day, including the Dunciad, the Rape of the Lock, and the Essay on Man. His translations of Homer (Iliad, Odyssey) brought him great wealth and with it he purchased a villa in Twickenham, where he created grottoes and gardens still in existence. Actor Louis Blois (last seen in The Allen Ginsberg Interview) lends his interpretation to the Pope canon at the Tibetan Art Museum in Staten Island. This is a FrenchQuarterLit.com production.
published: 23 May 2014
-
Alexander Pope Lesson
Don't forget to hit the Like and Subscribe videos to make sure you receive notifications about upcoming Literature, Grammar, Reading, Writing, and World History lessons from MrBrayman.Info.
In this lesson, we take a look at Alexander Pope's biography and its impact on his life, and then we'll look at epistolary literature and blank verse in preparation for a reading of Pope's Essay on Man, Epistle 1.
Below is the outline of the slides used in the lesson:
Alexander Pope Lesson
Brief Biography of Pope
Blank Verse and Epistolary Literature
Learning Objectives and Connections to the Project
Alexander Pope, 1688-1744
Lived and worked at a time in England when Catholics were subject to laws similar to the Jim Crow Laws of the American South
Early health problems left him undersized and physic...
published: 10 Mar 2013
-
Alexander pope biography in hindi (augustan age /neo classical age )
#Augustan_age #Neoclassical_age #Pope
published: 26 Apr 2019
-
Top 10 Actors Who Could Never Be Replaced in a Movie Role
Check out our featured song: "Tranquility" by Sophie Burrell! https://youtu.be/Jvqv2HcL-4M
Recasting these iconic roles would be cinematic blasphemy! For this list, we’ll be looking at beloved live-action movie roles that could never be performed by another actor. Our countdown includes Arnold Schwarzenegger, Robin Williams, Robert Downey Jr., and more! Who do you think is the most irreplaceable? Let us know in the comments below!
Watch more great acting videos here:
Top 10 Best Movie Performances of the Last Decade: https://youtu.be/QQnXcQKzD4w
Top 10 Famously Bad Actors Who Redeemed Themselves: https://youtu.be/qEva4y7DU4Y
Top 20 Most Difficult Actors To Work With: https://youtu.be/37RubfhQBvU
Have Your Idea Become A Video!
https://wmojo.com/suggest
Subscribe for more great conte...
published: 11 Mar 2021
-
Alexander Pope
A Biography
published: 18 May 2013
-
Alexander Pope/English Literature/English/BCS Preparation
Alexander Pope/English Literature/English/BCS Preparation
Charles Dickens/English Literature
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_bdpGSo--o
John Milton/English Literature
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOR6R...
John Dryden
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-qHdj...
Ben Jonson
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QfQO_...
Francis Bacon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Rsav...
John Donne
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kkwgL...
published: 19 Feb 2019
-
The Borgias Season 3: Episode 2 Clip - The Conspirators
Pope Alexander faces the conspirators.
published: 15 Apr 2013
-
Top 20 Alexander Pope Quotes (Author of The Rape of the Lock)
Find more Quotes Here : https://amzn.to/2UcsB59 Top 20 Alexander Pope Quotes (Author of The Rape of the Lock)
published: 24 Dec 2015
-
The Enlightenment and Alexander Pope
History of the European Enlightenment with brief introduction to Alexander Pope
published: 14 Mar 2017
-
Class K Interview The Bad Education Movie Premiere
Class K Interview The Bad Education Movie Premiere
Subscribe to Red Carpet News: http://bit.ly/1s3BQ54
The cast of Class K talks to Red Carpet News at the London world premiere for new comedy film The Bad Education Movie.
Red Carpet News brings you all the latest Film & Entertainment News. Featuring exclusive content and interviews for Game Of Thrones, Sherlock, Hunger Games, Marvel, Star Wars, Harry Potter, Downton Abbey, Doctor Who and so much more.
Visit our homepage at http://www.redcarpetnewstv.com or follow us on Twitter @RedCarpetNewsTV for exclusive daily updates, reviews, photo galleries and more. Don't forget to subscribe and thanks for watching
published: 10 Sep 2015
-
"Sound and Sense from Essay on Criticism" by Alexander Pope (read by Tom O'Bedlam)
This looks like a sonnet but it's just 14 lines chosen from Essay on Criticism:
http://poetry.eserver.org/essay-on-criticism.html
It describes how the sound of the words should match what they are describing. For instance:
"Dry clashed his harness in the icy caves
And barren chasms, and all to left and right
The bare black cliff clanged round him, as he based
His feet on juts of slippery crag that rang
Sharp-smitten with the dint of armed heels..."
(which is Tennyson at his best, Mort d'Arthur)
It's called onomatopoeia - or melopoeia,as Ezra Pound called it. Nowadays this is almost a lost art. Most modern poets don't bother about how their poems sound. They seem more concerned with how they look on paper, paying more attention to line-breaks.
"Timotheus' varied lays" refers to...
published: 04 Mar 2010
-
Epistle To Miss Blount-Alexander Pope(Part-1 :A Tribute To Voiture)
Educational
published: 22 Nov 2021
-
"Chloe - of the Characters of Women" Alexander Pope (read by Tom O'Bedlam)
By "wants" he means "lacks". The views of the poet are not necessarily the views of the reader, regarding women. Here's Pope at his poisonous best.
published: 21 Aug 2008
-
Why Hollywood Dropped Jim Caviezel
Jim Caviezel started gaining prominence as an actor in the 1990s with roles in dramas and action movies like Wyatt Earp, The Rock, and G.I. Jane. He received critical acclaim for his gripping portrayal of private Robert Witt in Terrence Malick’s epic war film The Thin Red Line.
In the 2000s Caviezel continued starring in popular movies like Angel Eyes and The Count of Monte Cristo. But his biggest -- and most controversial -- movie to date was Mel Gibson’s biblical drama The Passion of Christ, in which he played Jesus Christ.
But today Caviezel is nowhere to be seen in Hollywood anymore. Here is why he was dropped by Tinseltown.
#Hollywood #Celeb #Actor
Hollywood reject | 0:00
Back to school | 1:14
Love scenes lost | 1:49
Workplace and worship | 2:50
Career resurrection? | 3:41
Read ...
published: 12 Mar 2018
2:48
Alexander Pope's ESSAY ON CRITICISM -- A FrenchQuarterLit.com presentation by actor Louis Blois
English poet Alexander Pope was born in 1688, during the Enlightenment era. He lived in a time marked by political turmoil and rebellion. Several of his poems r...
English poet Alexander Pope was born in 1688, during the Enlightenment era. He lived in a time marked by political turmoil and rebellion. Several of his poems remain classics to this day, including the Dunciad, the Rape of the Lock, and the Essay on Man. His translations of Homer (Iliad, Odyssey) brought him great wealth and with it he purchased a villa in Twickenham, where he created grottoes and gardens still in existence. Actor Louis Blois (last seen in The Allen Ginsberg Interview) lends his interpretation to the Pope canon at the Tibetan Art Museum in Staten Island. This is a FrenchQuarterLit.com production.
https://wn.com/Alexander_Pope's_Essay_On_Criticism_A_Frenchquarterlit.Com_Presentation_By_Actor_Louis_Blois
English poet Alexander Pope was born in 1688, during the Enlightenment era. He lived in a time marked by political turmoil and rebellion. Several of his poems remain classics to this day, including the Dunciad, the Rape of the Lock, and the Essay on Man. His translations of Homer (Iliad, Odyssey) brought him great wealth and with it he purchased a villa in Twickenham, where he created grottoes and gardens still in existence. Actor Louis Blois (last seen in The Allen Ginsberg Interview) lends his interpretation to the Pope canon at the Tibetan Art Museum in Staten Island. This is a FrenchQuarterLit.com production.
- published: 23 May 2014
- views: 1264
10:23
Alexander Pope Lesson
Don't forget to hit the Like and Subscribe videos to make sure you receive notifications about upcoming Literature, Grammar, Reading, Writing, and World History...
Don't forget to hit the Like and Subscribe videos to make sure you receive notifications about upcoming Literature, Grammar, Reading, Writing, and World History lessons from MrBrayman.Info.
In this lesson, we take a look at Alexander Pope's biography and its impact on his life, and then we'll look at epistolary literature and blank verse in preparation for a reading of Pope's Essay on Man, Epistle 1.
Below is the outline of the slides used in the lesson:
Alexander Pope Lesson
Brief Biography of Pope
Blank Verse and Epistolary Literature
Learning Objectives and Connections to the Project
Alexander Pope, 1688-1744
Lived and worked at a time in England when Catholics were subject to laws similar to the Jim Crow Laws of the American South
Early health problems left him undersized and physically disabled
Literature was just becoming something that people could do for a living
Alexander Pope
Key Enlightenment figure along with Jonathan Swift and Sir Isaac Newton
Blank Verse
Unrhymed Iambic Pentameter
Shakespeare's verse in the plays
The version of Antigone that we read
Maintained the tradition of poetry but with a more flexible, straightforward style that anticipated prose
Epistolary Literature
Epistle: a formal letter addressed to one audience for one occasion but written in a way that it can be read by a general audience
Most of the New Testament is Saint Paul's Epistles
Epistolary novels—The Color Purple
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Written in ten stanzas (a stanza is like the paragraph of a poem, but not exactly)
Introduction: greets his audience—St. John (a friend)
Gives the thesis of the essay: [to] "vindicate the ways of God to man"—meaning to show how God's ways rule mankind
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza I: Pope takes a survey of the universe and asks his audience who made it and who's in charge—typical scientific approach to religion of the Enlightenment period
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza II: Pope begins to point out that man's place in the universe is minor and unimportant—compare this to the Biblical view of man as the most special part of the creation
Stanza III: Pope points out that men really know very little, and while Europeans think they know more than Indians, they don't
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza IV: Pope tells his audience to be wiser and that if man questions God about his place in the universe, he's acting like the fallen angels
Stanza V: This is perhaps the most devastating stanza in the epistle; it's Pope's personification of Pride as a selfish little brat
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanzas VI and VI: Pope points out that God has used Nature to give all animals their special powers and bodies—this is a typical Enlightenment view of Nature as a perfectly ordered system designed by the Master Architect (God the engineer or scientist)
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanzas VIII and IX: Pope continues to point out the evils of pride and questioning the perfection of Nature and man's place in it
Stanza X: Pope gives a very strong argument for humility and acceptance, ending with the chilling and humbling line: "whatever is, is right."
Learning Objectives
More exposure to blank verse and exposure to epistolary writing
More exposure to and practice in interpreting figurative language—especially personification and allusions
Reading poetry based on punctuation and not line breaks
Analyzing how figurative language creates meaning—written in essay format
Connection to the Project
Hubris is the Classical Greek idea of the kind of pride that leads to a fall
Pope undermines the hubris of the Enlightenment
Humans aren't that smart or special
Humans are just one part of God's larger creation
Humans should be more humble and accepting of the way things are
Pope counteracts Europe's growing sense of its self-importance and tries to reconnect his audience to humility
Lesson Completed—Good Job
I've also posted an audio "follow along" video online; it isn't much to look at, but it'll help you get the sound of Pope's poetry
https://wn.com/Alexander_Pope_Lesson
Don't forget to hit the Like and Subscribe videos to make sure you receive notifications about upcoming Literature, Grammar, Reading, Writing, and World History lessons from MrBrayman.Info.
In this lesson, we take a look at Alexander Pope's biography and its impact on his life, and then we'll look at epistolary literature and blank verse in preparation for a reading of Pope's Essay on Man, Epistle 1.
Below is the outline of the slides used in the lesson:
Alexander Pope Lesson
Brief Biography of Pope
Blank Verse and Epistolary Literature
Learning Objectives and Connections to the Project
Alexander Pope, 1688-1744
Lived and worked at a time in England when Catholics were subject to laws similar to the Jim Crow Laws of the American South
Early health problems left him undersized and physically disabled
Literature was just becoming something that people could do for a living
Alexander Pope
Key Enlightenment figure along with Jonathan Swift and Sir Isaac Newton
Blank Verse
Unrhymed Iambic Pentameter
Shakespeare's verse in the plays
The version of Antigone that we read
Maintained the tradition of poetry but with a more flexible, straightforward style that anticipated prose
Epistolary Literature
Epistle: a formal letter addressed to one audience for one occasion but written in a way that it can be read by a general audience
Most of the New Testament is Saint Paul's Epistles
Epistolary novels—The Color Purple
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Written in ten stanzas (a stanza is like the paragraph of a poem, but not exactly)
Introduction: greets his audience—St. John (a friend)
Gives the thesis of the essay: [to] "vindicate the ways of God to man"—meaning to show how God's ways rule mankind
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza I: Pope takes a survey of the universe and asks his audience who made it and who's in charge—typical scientific approach to religion of the Enlightenment period
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza II: Pope begins to point out that man's place in the universe is minor and unimportant—compare this to the Biblical view of man as the most special part of the creation
Stanza III: Pope points out that men really know very little, and while Europeans think they know more than Indians, they don't
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanza IV: Pope tells his audience to be wiser and that if man questions God about his place in the universe, he's acting like the fallen angels
Stanza V: This is perhaps the most devastating stanza in the epistle; it's Pope's personification of Pride as a selfish little brat
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanzas VI and VI: Pope points out that God has used Nature to give all animals their special powers and bodies—this is a typical Enlightenment view of Nature as a perfectly ordered system designed by the Master Architect (God the engineer or scientist)
The Structure of "An Essay on Man, Epistle I"
Stanzas VIII and IX: Pope continues to point out the evils of pride and questioning the perfection of Nature and man's place in it
Stanza X: Pope gives a very strong argument for humility and acceptance, ending with the chilling and humbling line: "whatever is, is right."
Learning Objectives
More exposure to blank verse and exposure to epistolary writing
More exposure to and practice in interpreting figurative language—especially personification and allusions
Reading poetry based on punctuation and not line breaks
Analyzing how figurative language creates meaning—written in essay format
Connection to the Project
Hubris is the Classical Greek idea of the kind of pride that leads to a fall
Pope undermines the hubris of the Enlightenment
Humans aren't that smart or special
Humans are just one part of God's larger creation
Humans should be more humble and accepting of the way things are
Pope counteracts Europe's growing sense of its self-importance and tries to reconnect his audience to humility
Lesson Completed—Good Job
I've also posted an audio "follow along" video online; it isn't much to look at, but it'll help you get the sound of Pope's poetry
- published: 10 Mar 2013
- views: 39292
14:59
Top 10 Actors Who Could Never Be Replaced in a Movie Role
Check out our featured song: "Tranquility" by Sophie Burrell! https://youtu.be/Jvqv2HcL-4M
Recasting these iconic roles would be cinematic blasphemy! For this ...
Check out our featured song: "Tranquility" by Sophie Burrell! https://youtu.be/Jvqv2HcL-4M
Recasting these iconic roles would be cinematic blasphemy! For this list, we’ll be looking at beloved live-action movie roles that could never be performed by another actor. Our countdown includes Arnold Schwarzenegger, Robin Williams, Robert Downey Jr., and more! Who do you think is the most irreplaceable? Let us know in the comments below!
Watch more great acting videos here:
Top 10 Best Movie Performances of the Last Decade: https://youtu.be/QQnXcQKzD4w
Top 10 Famously Bad Actors Who Redeemed Themselves: https://youtu.be/qEva4y7DU4Y
Top 20 Most Difficult Actors To Work With: https://youtu.be/37RubfhQBvU
Have Your Idea Become A Video!
https://wmojo.com/suggest
Subscribe for more great content!
https://wmojo.com/watchmojo-subscribe
Visit WatchMojo Club for Great Deals!
https://wmojo.com/WatchMojoClub
Your trusted authority for Top 10 lists, reviews, tips and tricks, biographies, origins, and entertainment news on Film, TV, Video Games, Comics, Celeb, Music and Superheroes.
#Film
#Actors
#RobertDowneyJr.
https://wn.com/Top_10_Actors_Who_Could_Never_Be_Replaced_In_A_Movie_Role
Check out our featured song: "Tranquility" by Sophie Burrell! https://youtu.be/Jvqv2HcL-4M
Recasting these iconic roles would be cinematic blasphemy! For this list, we’ll be looking at beloved live-action movie roles that could never be performed by another actor. Our countdown includes Arnold Schwarzenegger, Robin Williams, Robert Downey Jr., and more! Who do you think is the most irreplaceable? Let us know in the comments below!
Watch more great acting videos here:
Top 10 Best Movie Performances of the Last Decade: https://youtu.be/QQnXcQKzD4w
Top 10 Famously Bad Actors Who Redeemed Themselves: https://youtu.be/qEva4y7DU4Y
Top 20 Most Difficult Actors To Work With: https://youtu.be/37RubfhQBvU
Have Your Idea Become A Video!
https://wmojo.com/suggest
Subscribe for more great content!
https://wmojo.com/watchmojo-subscribe
Visit WatchMojo Club for Great Deals!
https://wmojo.com/WatchMojoClub
Your trusted authority for Top 10 lists, reviews, tips and tricks, biographies, origins, and entertainment news on Film, TV, Video Games, Comics, Celeb, Music and Superheroes.
#Film
#Actors
#RobertDowneyJr.
- published: 11 Mar 2021
- views: 409265
6:00
Alexander Pope/English Literature/English/BCS Preparation
Alexander Pope/English Literature/English/BCS Preparation
Charles Dickens/English Literature
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_bdpGSo--o
John Milton/English L...
Alexander Pope/English Literature/English/BCS Preparation
Charles Dickens/English Literature
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_bdpGSo--o
John Milton/English Literature
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOR6R...
John Dryden
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-qHdj...
Ben Jonson
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QfQO_...
Francis Bacon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Rsav...
John Donne
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kkwgL...
https://wn.com/Alexander_Pope_English_Literature_English_Bcs_Preparation
Alexander Pope/English Literature/English/BCS Preparation
Charles Dickens/English Literature
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_bdpGSo--o
John Milton/English Literature
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOR6R...
John Dryden
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-qHdj...
Ben Jonson
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QfQO_...
Francis Bacon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Rsav...
John Donne
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kkwgL...
- published: 19 Feb 2019
- views: 825
3:28
Top 20 Alexander Pope Quotes (Author of The Rape of the Lock)
Find more Quotes Here : https://amzn.to/2UcsB59 Top 20 Alexander Pope Quotes (Author of The Rape of the Lock)
Find more Quotes Here : https://amzn.to/2UcsB59 Top 20 Alexander Pope Quotes (Author of The Rape of the Lock)
https://wn.com/Top_20_Alexander_Pope_Quotes_(Author_Of_The_Rape_Of_The_Lock)
Find more Quotes Here : https://amzn.to/2UcsB59 Top 20 Alexander Pope Quotes (Author of The Rape of the Lock)
- published: 24 Dec 2015
- views: 5892
12:33
The Enlightenment and Alexander Pope
History of the European Enlightenment with brief introduction to Alexander Pope
History of the European Enlightenment with brief introduction to Alexander Pope
https://wn.com/The_Enlightenment_And_Alexander_Pope
History of the European Enlightenment with brief introduction to Alexander Pope
- published: 14 Mar 2017
- views: 346
3:54
Class K Interview The Bad Education Movie Premiere
Class K Interview The Bad Education Movie Premiere
Subscribe to Red Carpet News: http://bit.ly/1s3BQ54
The cast of Class K talks to Red Carpet News at the Lond...
Class K Interview The Bad Education Movie Premiere
Subscribe to Red Carpet News: http://bit.ly/1s3BQ54
The cast of Class K talks to Red Carpet News at the London world premiere for new comedy film The Bad Education Movie.
Red Carpet News brings you all the latest Film & Entertainment News. Featuring exclusive content and interviews for Game Of Thrones, Sherlock, Hunger Games, Marvel, Star Wars, Harry Potter, Downton Abbey, Doctor Who and so much more.
Visit our homepage at http://www.redcarpetnewstv.com or follow us on Twitter @RedCarpetNewsTV for exclusive daily updates, reviews, photo galleries and more. Don't forget to subscribe and thanks for watching
https://wn.com/Class_K_Interview_The_Bad_Education_Movie_Premiere
Class K Interview The Bad Education Movie Premiere
Subscribe to Red Carpet News: http://bit.ly/1s3BQ54
The cast of Class K talks to Red Carpet News at the London world premiere for new comedy film The Bad Education Movie.
Red Carpet News brings you all the latest Film & Entertainment News. Featuring exclusive content and interviews for Game Of Thrones, Sherlock, Hunger Games, Marvel, Star Wars, Harry Potter, Downton Abbey, Doctor Who and so much more.
Visit our homepage at http://www.redcarpetnewstv.com or follow us on Twitter @RedCarpetNewsTV for exclusive daily updates, reviews, photo galleries and more. Don't forget to subscribe and thanks for watching
- published: 10 Sep 2015
- views: 358454
1:06
"Sound and Sense from Essay on Criticism" by Alexander Pope (read by Tom O'Bedlam)
This looks like a sonnet but it's just 14 lines chosen from Essay on Criticism:
http://poetry.eserver.org/essay-on-criticism.html
It describes how the sound of...
This looks like a sonnet but it's just 14 lines chosen from Essay on Criticism:
http://poetry.eserver.org/essay-on-criticism.html
It describes how the sound of the words should match what they are describing. For instance:
"Dry clashed his harness in the icy caves
And barren chasms, and all to left and right
The bare black cliff clanged round him, as he based
His feet on juts of slippery crag that rang
Sharp-smitten with the dint of armed heels..."
(which is Tennyson at his best, Mort d'Arthur)
It's called onomatopoeia - or melopoeia,as Ezra Pound called it. Nowadays this is almost a lost art. Most modern poets don't bother about how their poems sound. They seem more concerned with how they look on paper, paying more attention to line-breaks.
"Timotheus' varied lays" refers to an ode called "Alexander's Feast" by John Dryden, subtitled "The Power of Music". Its theme is how music can bypass reason and stir up emotions.
http://www.poetry-online.org/dryden_alexanders_feast.htm
Odours also have the ability to short-circuit the analytical brain and evoke emotions and memories instantly.
https://wn.com/Sound_And_Sense_From_Essay_On_Criticism_By_Alexander_Pope_(Read_By_Tom_O'Bedlam)
This looks like a sonnet but it's just 14 lines chosen from Essay on Criticism:
http://poetry.eserver.org/essay-on-criticism.html
It describes how the sound of the words should match what they are describing. For instance:
"Dry clashed his harness in the icy caves
And barren chasms, and all to left and right
The bare black cliff clanged round him, as he based
His feet on juts of slippery crag that rang
Sharp-smitten with the dint of armed heels..."
(which is Tennyson at his best, Mort d'Arthur)
It's called onomatopoeia - or melopoeia,as Ezra Pound called it. Nowadays this is almost a lost art. Most modern poets don't bother about how their poems sound. They seem more concerned with how they look on paper, paying more attention to line-breaks.
"Timotheus' varied lays" refers to an ode called "Alexander's Feast" by John Dryden, subtitled "The Power of Music". Its theme is how music can bypass reason and stir up emotions.
http://www.poetry-online.org/dryden_alexanders_feast.htm
Odours also have the ability to short-circuit the analytical brain and evoke emotions and memories instantly.
- published: 04 Mar 2010
- views: 12470
1:30
"Chloe - of the Characters of Women" Alexander Pope (read by Tom O'Bedlam)
By "wants" he means "lacks". The views of the poet are not necessarily the views of the reader, regarding women. Here's Pope at his poisonous best.
By "wants" he means "lacks". The views of the poet are not necessarily the views of the reader, regarding women. Here's Pope at his poisonous best.
https://wn.com/Chloe_Of_The_Characters_Of_Women_Alexander_Pope_(Read_By_Tom_O'Bedlam)
By "wants" he means "lacks". The views of the poet are not necessarily the views of the reader, regarding women. Here's Pope at his poisonous best.
- published: 21 Aug 2008
- views: 1539
4:36
Why Hollywood Dropped Jim Caviezel
Jim Caviezel started gaining prominence as an actor in the 1990s with roles in dramas and action movies like Wyatt Earp, The Rock, and G.I. Jane. He received cr...
Jim Caviezel started gaining prominence as an actor in the 1990s with roles in dramas and action movies like Wyatt Earp, The Rock, and G.I. Jane. He received critical acclaim for his gripping portrayal of private Robert Witt in Terrence Malick’s epic war film The Thin Red Line.
In the 2000s Caviezel continued starring in popular movies like Angel Eyes and The Count of Monte Cristo. But his biggest -- and most controversial -- movie to date was Mel Gibson’s biblical drama The Passion of Christ, in which he played Jesus Christ.
But today Caviezel is nowhere to be seen in Hollywood anymore. Here is why he was dropped by Tinseltown.
#Hollywood #Celeb #Actor
Hollywood reject | 0:00
Back to school | 1:14
Love scenes lost | 1:49
Workplace and worship | 2:50
Career resurrection? | 3:41
Read Full Article: http://www.looper.com/108449/hollywood-wont-cast-jim-caviezel/
https://wn.com/Why_Hollywood_Dropped_Jim_Caviezel
Jim Caviezel started gaining prominence as an actor in the 1990s with roles in dramas and action movies like Wyatt Earp, The Rock, and G.I. Jane. He received critical acclaim for his gripping portrayal of private Robert Witt in Terrence Malick’s epic war film The Thin Red Line.
In the 2000s Caviezel continued starring in popular movies like Angel Eyes and The Count of Monte Cristo. But his biggest -- and most controversial -- movie to date was Mel Gibson’s biblical drama The Passion of Christ, in which he played Jesus Christ.
But today Caviezel is nowhere to be seen in Hollywood anymore. Here is why he was dropped by Tinseltown.
#Hollywood #Celeb #Actor
Hollywood reject | 0:00
Back to school | 1:14
Love scenes lost | 1:49
Workplace and worship | 2:50
Career resurrection? | 3:41
Read Full Article: http://www.looper.com/108449/hollywood-wont-cast-jim-caviezel/
- published: 12 Mar 2018
- views: 3623874