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Improve your English by lending an ear
Daydreamer
22 episodes
1 month ago
This podcast has been created specifically for English learners all over the world. I'd like to take you on a journey that involves you, me, and words in order for us to learn as much English as possible together. I had to learn English many years ago, so I know what it's like to sit in a corner, afraid, ashamed, and nervous to say something in English because you're terrified of making a mistake and being embarrassed. So you can improve your English while you listening, I give literature a voice by podcasting recordings of classic poems from the past. My library is meant to be a resource for everyone who enjoys reading and listening great stories. It's all about the listening for me, and how hearing poetry can make it more accessible while also amplifying its emotional impact.https://anchor.fm/daydreamer-3/subscribehttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/a.a.bhttps://anchor.fm/daydreamer4
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Language Learning
Education
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All content for Improve your English by lending an ear is the property of Daydreamer and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
This podcast has been created specifically for English learners all over the world. I'd like to take you on a journey that involves you, me, and words in order for us to learn as much English as possible together. I had to learn English many years ago, so I know what it's like to sit in a corner, afraid, ashamed, and nervous to say something in English because you're terrified of making a mistake and being embarrassed. So you can improve your English while you listening, I give literature a voice by podcasting recordings of classic poems from the past. My library is meant to be a resource for everyone who enjoys reading and listening great stories. It's all about the listening for me, and how hearing poetry can make it more accessible while also amplifying its emotional impact.https://anchor.fm/daydreamer-3/subscribehttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/a.a.bhttps://anchor.fm/daydreamer4
Show more...
Language Learning
Education
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Mad Girl’s Love Song by Sylvia Plath
Improve your English by lending an ear
1 minute
2 years ago
Mad Girl’s Love Song by Sylvia Plath
Sylvia Plath was an American poet and novelist, best known for her advancement of Confessionalist poetry as a genre through her collections, Colossus and Other Poems, 1960, and Ariel, 1965. Her only novel, The Bell Jar, is a semi-autobiographical coming-of-age story which illustrates a young woman finding her way through the world of fashion writing while battling with demons from her past, love and relationships, and recurring bouts of severe mental illness.Plath moved to England in 1959 with her husband and renown author and poet, Ted Hughes. Their relationship was tumultuous and holds a lot of speculation from supporters and critiques of each writer. Plath underwent several kinds of controversial mental illness treatment throughout her life including multiple episodes of electro-convulsive therapy. She continued to write until she tragically ended her own life at her home in Primrose Hill, London in February 1963.Mad Girl’s Love Song is a villanelle; A villanelle is a poetic form consisting of nineteen lines: five tercets and a final quantrain. The memorable rhythm of a villanelle is created by its ‘refrain’. This is the first and third line of the opening stanza, which are alternatively repeated as the final line in each tercet, coming together as the final lines at the very end of the poem. The rhyme scheme is ABA x5 ABAA.As with much of Sylvia Plath's poetry, this poem is confessionalist. In this vein, it is safe to assume that the speaker represents Plath and her personal battle with depression. Many religious references throughout the poem create a lofty and almost dissociated sensation, further impacted by the repetition in the villanelle. Her own beliefs, stated in a feminist essay critiquing the role of religion in oppression is felt within the poem, showing a force seemingly outside of the speaker’s control. However, the refrain shifts the power back into the speaker’s hands, as they ‘shut [their] eyes and all the world drops dead’, implying that the greatest powers and challenges are not external forces, but within the mind.What do you think of this poem? Have you read any of Sylvia Plath’s works? Let me know in the comments below.
Improve your English by lending an ear
This podcast has been created specifically for English learners all over the world. I'd like to take you on a journey that involves you, me, and words in order for us to learn as much English as possible together. I had to learn English many years ago, so I know what it's like to sit in a corner, afraid, ashamed, and nervous to say something in English because you're terrified of making a mistake and being embarrassed. So you can improve your English while you listening, I give literature a voice by podcasting recordings of classic poems from the past. My library is meant to be a resource for everyone who enjoys reading and listening great stories. It's all about the listening for me, and how hearing poetry can make it more accessible while also amplifying its emotional impact.https://anchor.fm/daydreamer-3/subscribehttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/a.a.bhttps://anchor.fm/daydreamer4