Welcome to the English IV Website for Trinity High School!

 

I hope to keep this site updated every other week.  You’ll be able to find lesson plans and some links for the stories we’ll read.  I hope you find it informative and helpful and that you refer to it regularly.  Let me know when you find errors, please.  I’ll try to fix them as soon as I can.  Welcome back to my classroom!  I hope we have a great semester!

 

English IV is a required course.  You will be introduced to a variety of British Literature, write essays about the works and your reactions to them, and be tested over the material from the text and notes.

Checking this site regularly will help you stay on track of your responsibilities.

 

Click here to retrieve the permission form for watching movies in English class.  Please have a parent or guardian sign the document and then return it to me as soon as possible.  Thanks!  

Remember, too, NO ONE IS EXEMPT FROM THE FINAL EXAM. 

 

Click here for Grammar Card                    Click here for tentative course syllabus.

 

Click Here to go to Lesson Plans                      Click here to return to Mrs. Rhodes’s home page.

 

Unit One Notes from Text…Highlight, copy, paste, and print them!

 

Unit Two Notes from text…highlight, copy, paste, and print them!

 

 Unit Three Notes from Text…Highlight, copy, paste, and print them!

 

Unit Four Notes from Text…MACBETH…Highlight, copy, paste, and print them! 

 

Unit Four Notes from text…HAMLET…Highlight, copy, paste, and print them!

 

Unit Five Notes for Text…Highlight, copy, paste, and print them!

 

Unit Six Notes from Text…Highlight, copy, paste, and print selection!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

English Note Card

Don’t lose this paper…you’ll need it when you write papers and take tests!

 

Check front & back of papers and answer all the questions.

Use capital letters & punctuation where needed in a complete sentence.

Don’t abbreviate b/c or w/ in a formal paper.

A lot = TWO WORDS!        

they’re = they are        their = possessive pronoun          There = all other cases

good = an adjective that modifies a noun             He’s a good dancer.

well = an adverb that modifies a verb             He dances well.

don’t = do not           doesn’t = does not

If you can’t figure out the difference…do not use the contractions!

too = an excessive amount two = 2           to = all other cases

 

Christina Rule = If you can’t figure out how to say or write something

correctly, please use another way/word/phrase.

Use a dictionary or ask the teacher if you don’t know how to spell a word.

Know the difference between words that sound alike (ex.  accept, except).

 

Balance all of your tenses within a sentence or story.  Use all present or all past, etc.

 She got out of bed and then goes to the door.  (WRONG!)  She got out of bed and then went to the door.

 

Use nouns to introduce/clarify pronouns:

He walked behind him and gave him a push.  (WRONG!)  Sam walked behind Mark and pushed him.

 

Ain’t should not be used in written work except when someone is being

quoted or when used to demonstrate local color.

 

Past tense of to be:  I was, you were, he/she/it was, we were, they were

In subjunctive case:  I were or he/she/it were (If I were you…)

NEVER USE:  you was, we was or they was!!

NEVER USE:  I seen, you seen, he/she/it seen, we seen or they seen!!

 

Replace the word “got” with a stronger verb, if possible.  Always try to use strong verbs!

 

Avoid beginning sentences with:  “so,” “well,” “then,” or “but,” unless your speaker

is telling a story in a very informal format.

 

Don’t begin a sentence with the word “because” unless you’re introducing a phrase

and you have a second part to your sentence that includes a subject and verb. 

(Ex.:  Because I don’t like Italian food, I don’t eat in Italian restaurants.)

 

SUBJECT PRONOUNS:  I, you, he, she, it, we, & they

OBJECT PRONOUNS:  me, you, him, her, it, us, & them

Do not use object pronouns as subject pronouns!  Me and him did not go to the store! 

He and I went to the store.  He went to the store with me.  I went to the store with him. 

NOTE THE DIFFERENCE!  If the pronoun is used as a subject, use the subject pronoun.

He is taller than she (is).  He is not taller than her.

CHECK ALL YOUR WORK!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Parents,

Because of Diocesan policy, I am required to have your permission to show your child

any movie that is not rated G; that’s why I wanted to provide the list of movies we watch

in class and ask you to sign the attached permission form.  I have chosen the films to

coincide with themes we’ll be discussing in the classroom.  I don’t expect to see all of

these films, but this is the list from which I am likely to choose. 

 

Thank you,

Christina Rhodes

 

 

 

English IV

 

Hamlet

Macbeth

A Knight’s Tale

Pride and Prejudice

Sense and Sensibility

Oliver Twist

Nicholas Nickleby

Frankenstein

 

 

 

My child _________________________________ has my permission to watch films in

his/her English class.  I have been provided with a list of the movies to be viewed, and I

agree to allow my child to watch those presented. 

 

________________________________                                _____________________

Parent Signature                                                                                           Date

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Syllabus

 

 

Course Description:  The course begins with the study of early Anglo-Saxon literature and

concludes with works from the Romantic Age, unless we find a way to go further.  Some of

the works studied are challenging to the students as they try to grasp the meanings while also

understanding the historical aspects of the nation, which frequently tie into the writer’s themes. 

The students will be assigned various writing assignments and are also required to complete a

research paper.  Students will also fulfill the KERA requirement of completing a senior portfolio.

 

Class Supplies:  2-pocket folder or a notebook with pockets, notebook paper, and ink pens. 

Assignments should be completed in pen or typed, when required.  Students must bring their

text books, notebooks and writing utensils to class. 

 

Brief Outline:

Anglo-Saxon Unit:  Beowulf and works of Bede

Medieval Unit: folk ballads, Canterbury Tales, Le Morte d’Arthur

Elizabethan Unit:  Spenser, Marlowe, Raleigh, Shakespeare’s poetry, The King James Bible

Elizabethan Drama Unit:  Macbeth or Hamlet

17th Century Unit:  Donne, Marvell, Herrick, Milton, Bunyan

Romantic Age Unit:  Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Keats

Romantic Age Novels:  Jane Austin film and Frankenstein novel

Other: Research paper and portfolio

 

 

 

Portfolio days (tentative):

 

Early August:  review of required pieces

1st work completed by end of August

2nd work completed by end of September

3rd work completed by end of October

4th work completed by mid-November

 

November: group peer editing

 

December exam day:  Portfolios are due and will be graded as your midterm exam.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tentative Lesson Plans

 

 

English -  IV Lesson Plans      (tentative)                                         

 

English -  IV Lesson Plans                                                      Weeks 20, 21, & 22

January 4 - 21        

 

 

 

Jan 4        attendance, lunch count, etc.   Start with their taking the quiz from day one; do they know more?

Start 17th Century British Literature.  A lot of turmoil and violence as the people fought the monarchy for power. 

It is also the time of the plague.  Intro is on pages 239 – 245.  Use my overhead notes, too!

We’ll review notes today over the beginning of the period, and we may take notes over John Donne, if time.

Poems we’ll cover this unit include “A Valediction Forbidding Mourning,” “The Flea,” and The Holy Sonnets

(Death Be Not Proud and Batter My Heart, Three Person’d God).  Expect to finish “Valediction” today.  Cover “The Flea,” briefly, if time allows.

 

 

 

Jan 6        attendance, lunch count, etc.  If time, cover “Flea,” which is not on the test; then cover the sonnets.

                Review the notes from the introduction.  Cover the plays on words (Sun / Son, due / do), paradox and

apostrophe.  Give out the worksheet on Donne, have them work on it, but we’ll have a few minutes at the start of the next class.

 

 

Jan 8        attendance, lunch count, etc.   Finish a worksheet on Donne’s work and submit it today. 

 

If we finished Donne’s work, we’ll move on to Marvell and Herrick today.  Remember the notion of tracking

time had been invented and that these writers were using this to their advantage.  Start the poetry assignment

as soon as we’re finished with the reading. 

 

 

 

Jan 12      attendance, lunch count, etc.

Finish the poetry assignment, in groups.  Start working on Milton’s work.  Give notes from the overhead, and

 begin reading through “Paradise Lost.”  If we don’t finish it completely, we’ll at least come close.

 

 

 

Jan 14      attendance, lunch count, etc.

Complete discussion of “Paradise Lost.”  Give out the worksheet and have them complete it and turn it in.

Review notes from the intro and the works of the other writers so far.     Start notes on Pilgrim’s Progress.

Read as much as we can and give notes.

 

 

Jan 19      attendance, lunch count, etc.

                Return and review the answers to the worksheets from before (“Paradise Lost”).

Finish reading Pilgrim’s Progress.  This is the last title for this unit and we should begin preparations for a test. 

After finishing the story, play 17th Century Jeopardy.  The test will be given in our next meeting.

 

 

Jan 21      attendance, lunch count, etc.

Test today!   Start Romantic works soon after.

While we’re at it, we’ll begin our discussion of the research paper for the class.  What topics might they be interested in studying? 

Be prepared to give me a topic by February 5th.  Make sure they’ve looked around to find out what they can find and what they can’t. 

The more info the better, usually, but they should be able to narrow down any topic.

 

 

If time:  Have them choose a topic that interests them and write as much as they can about the topic…freehanded. 

Make sure to go through and organize their ideas.  Research topics are needed!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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English IV                     Unit I Notes from text  (COPY AND PASTE BEFORE PRINTING, OR HIGHLIGHT AND PRINT SELECTION ONLY)

 

Our text focuses on English literature including English language literature from Ireland or other independent nations that were once part of the British Empire.

 

Britain has had a monarchy system for over 1000 years.  Today, there is a constitutional monarchy, in which a sovereign serves as head of state but does not actually rule.  The ministers (government officials) headed by a Prime Minister, rule the country.  Parliament is the lawmaking body; it is made up of a House of Lords and a House of Commons. 

 

Anglo-Saxon Period                                           449-1066 AD

 

English literature began when the Germanic tribes, the Angles, the Saxons, and the Jutes left northern Europe and began invading the island of Britain in 449 AD.

 

The word English comes from the origin Angleish.  Today, the language these tribes developed is known as Old English, and it’s much different from the modern form with which we’re familiar.

 

Romans had invaded Europe many years before 449 AD; in fact, the Romans ruled most of the then-known world by 250 BC.  The history of Britain is actually first mentioned in Roman literature / historical documents.

 

Julius Caesar was the first Roman general to visit Britain.  He wrote a description of early Britain and the two tribes who lived there at the time:  1) the Picts (a Roman word meaning painted faces) and 2) the Britons or Celts of Britain.

 

A second group of Celts, the Gaels, lived on a smaller island called Eire, which became known as Eireland or Ireland. 

 

In 43 AD, the Romans returned to Britain and stayed there for more than 300 years. 

 

When the Roman Empire adopted Christianity in the 4th century, so did the Britons. 

 

The Britons relied heavily on Roman military protection.  When the Roman Empire began to fall, the Roman legions left Britain to defend Rome, and the Britons became easy prey to other invaders.

 

Soon, the Angles, Saxons and Jutes began to invade.  King Arthur, of Britain, won a few battles, but he and his men were eventually pushed from the central portion of the island.

 

Many fleeing Britons settled in Wales, others in Ireland; some traveled back to Northern Britain and brought a new name, Scotia, now Scotland.

 

In Wales, Ireland, and Scotland, the Celtic language flourished, as did Christianity.

 

In Ireland, Celtic monks created one of the most beautiful early Bible manuscripts, the Book of Kells.

 

The Angles, Saxons, and the Jutes were seafaring warriors, and they often fought among themselves.  They had short life expectancies and a bleak, gloomy outlook on life.

 

One’s fate was known as wyrd, and it was considered unavoidable.  All roads, they felt, led to death.  Eventually, a less violent, agricultural life helped to settle things. 

 

By the end of the 7th century, Christianity was also a firm peacekeeping force. 

The Anglo-Saxon civilization emerged.  Christianity helped establish the beginning of education and a more civilized culture.

 

The first English literature was oral, not written. 

 

Songs and poems were sung or recited by traveling minstrels known as scops, who composed or memorized oral literature and passed it down from generation to generation. 

 

The scops provided entertainment when people celebrated a battle or the return of a hero.

 

The earliest English story-poem to come down to us is about a hero named Beowulf.

 

Beowulf is an example of an epic, a long narrative (story-telling) poem that recounts the adventures of a hero.  The hero usually embodies his civilization’s ideals.

 

Lyric poems are shorter verses that express personal thoughts and feelings.  Often, these were religious in nature, revealing deep faith and devotion to Christianity.  Other lyric poems described tribal wanderings on land or sea, or they lamented the tragedy of war and emigration.  Others were exotic riddles, showing a fondness for a creative use of language. 

 

Not until Bede’s day did Anglo-Saxon monks, working as scribes, begin to record the scops’ oral compositions. 


Bede preserved the lines of a religious poet named Caedmon, the first English poet we know by name. 

 

Bede and other monks also composed their own literature, the first written literature in England. 

 

Bede’s Ecclesiastical History of the English People offers a remarkably complete picture of early Anglo-Saxon life and times. 

 

Bede wrote in Latin, the language of Church scholarship. 

 

Alfred the Great, the era’s most important political leader, first encouraged the wide-spread use of Old English in written literature.

 

Alliteration:  the repetition of identical consonant sounds at the beginning of words in the same lines. 


Caesura:  a strong rhythm in which a pronounced pause occurs in the middle of a line

 

Kenning:  imaginative metaphorical phrases used in place of a simple noun.  Examples:  the sea may be called the “whale-road” or the sun may be called “heaven’s candle.”

 

When the Germanic tribes invaded Britain, they not only brought their way of speaking, but they brought legends of traditional heroes who would become the subjects of their literature.  Though their outlook on life dealt with the inevitability of death, they believed, too, that one could attain a degree of immortality by winning fame and being remembered for heroic deeds.  Courage was the most important virtue for one of these heroes.  Loyalty to one’s tribal lord was also important, as was wisdom in making decisions and in guiding others.  Boasting was a hero’s dare, and physical strength was crucial. 

 

The name Beowulf means “bear.”

 

The anonymous author of this epic was obviously Christian, for his story contains references to the Bible and many expressions of a deep religious faith. 

 

Christian scribes translated the copy that has been handed down to us in the late tenth century. 

 

We will read only parts of the 3200 line poem, starting with a description of the deadly monster, Grendel.  Hrothgar, king of the Danes, has built a great hall called Herot, where he and his people celebrate.  The Danes lead a happy and peaceful existence until Grendel, who hates their noisy celebrations, invades Herot late one night and murders the Danes in their sleep….

 

Vernacular – the language of the people, in this case (Beowulf), Old English rather than Latin.

 

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The Medieval Period             1066-1485       Unit II notes from text  (COPY AND PASTE BEFORE PRINTING, OR HIGHLIGHT AND PRINT SELECTION ONLY)

 

The Medieval Period is often referred to as the Middle Ages.  The Medieval Period began in 1066 when the Normans, led by William the Conqueror, defeated the Anglo-Saxons in the Battle of Hastings.  William, the Norman King, introduced feudalism.

 

Land, which signified wealth, was divided among the noble overlords, known as barons.

Lesser lords pledged their wealth and service to the overlords who, in turn, provided use of the land.

 

Serfs, or peasants, were at the lowest end of the social scale.

 

After the Norman line ended its reign, other monarchs carried England through the rest of the Middle Ages.  Most of these kings were strong, interesting, people living troubled, dangerous, complex lives in their search for power. 

 

The first monarchs are known as the Plantagenet Kings.  King Henry II, the first of these monarchs, fought to control the Catholic Church in England, leading to the murder of Thomas a Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury.

 

Henry’s son, Richard the Lion-Hearted, is the model of a true knight.  During Richard’s reign, he traveled the world giving riches to the poor and seeking holy relics.

 

Richard’s brother, John, who succeeded Richard, was a weak and villainous leader.  John, in 1215, was forced to sign the Magna Carta (Latin for Great Charter), in which he agreed not to raise taxes without the consent of the barons.  Many see the Magna Carta as the beginning of a constitutional government in England.

 

During the reign of the Lancaster Kings, there were many battles:  Battle of Agincourt, Hundred Years’ War, and War of the Roses.

 

Yorkist Kings came next.  Edward IV encouraged William Caxton to set up a printing press with movable type, capable of printing in quantities large enough to bring printed word to the general public. 

 

The rest of Yorkist history is dark.  (An uncle (Richard III) took control over Edward V’s reign, and it was rumored that he had Edward V and Edward’s younger brother murdered.) 

 

Tudor rule began in 1485, at which point the Middle Ages are said to have ended.

 

During the Middle Ages, knighthood flourished in England.  Knights went on local quests, or went across the sea to fight the French, or on long journeys to the Holy Land.  They jousted in tournaments while fair ladies watched and waited. 

 

Chivalry was an ideal (not idea) that all knights must try to attain:  to be honorable, courteous, generous, brave, skillful in battle, respectful to women, and helpful to the weak.  The Romantic attitude of chivalry affected much of literature.    

 

The Roman Catholic Church was very powerful in England during the Middle Ages.  People from all walks of life practiced this faith and built their lives around church teachings. 

 

Knights were willing to die and often jointed the crusades.  Crusades were military expeditions undertaken to recapture the city of Jerusalem from the Moslems.  They took place between 1096-1270.  They weren’t successful, but they left a violent and bloody trail behind them on their way to the Holy Land.

 

In England, the Normans built monasteries and abbeys, which strengthened the church’s physical presence.  Latin was the language of the church and was known to all the educated people of England.  Thus, much lit of the period was written in Latin.

 

Life was normal and happy for Englanders of the time, rather idyllic for a while.  In 1348 and 49, though, the dreadful Black Death (bubonic plague) killed 1/3 of the English population. 

 

England still prospered.  Guilds, like the trade unions of today, developed and established an elaborate hierarchy.  Herding became more important than farming.  The end of knighthood was mostly caused by the invention of gunpowder.

 

Drama as public entertainment began in England during the Medieval Period in the form of mystery plays or miracle plays, which were developed by the Church in an attempt to instruct the illiterate in the miraculous stories.

 

Later came the morality plays in which actors played the roles of virtues and vices (patience, greed, etc.).  The conflict between good and evil ultimately took place within the heart of a single hero.

 

Folk ballads:  anonymous, narrative verses intended to be sung and passed on by oral tradition. 

 

Folk ballads came from unlettered people instead of professional minstrels or scholarly poets.  They used simple language and much dialogue to move quickly from scene to scene.  Much of what happens in a ballad is revealed through dialogue (the speech of the characters involved.  (Think about Lord Randal in your freshman book.)

 

The ballad stanza contains four lines (a quatrain) rhyming abcd, with four accented syllables within the first and third lines and three accented syllables in the second and fourth. 

 

Some fold ballads used refrains, repetitions of a line or lines in every stanza without variation.

 

Verisimilitude:  a sense that what’s being narrated is true

 

Direct characterization:  takes place when the narrator tells us specifically about a character’s personality.

 

Indirect characterization:  takes place when the narrator provides details that force us to draw our own conclusions about a character (what they say, how they dress, what others say about them, etc.)

 

Imagery:  language that appeals to the senses (most commonly, sight)

 

Couplet:  two lines of a poem (almost always rhymed) that usually draw a conclusion or present a solution to problems in the work.

 

Irony is the awareness of a contrast between appearance and reality.

 

Situational irony occurs when what appears likely to happen is not what happens.

 

Verbal irony occurs when words in a work appear to mean one thing but really mean the opposite.

 

Dramatic irony occurs when what appears to be true in a work is not what the audience knows to be true. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Elizabethan Age                                         1485-1625                     note from text

(COPY AND PASTE BEFORE PRINTING, OR HIGHLIGHT AND PRINT SELECTION ONLY)

 

Finally, we’re at the age of modern English!

 

Henry VII, Tudor king, helped end the War of the Roses and began a new royal line. 

 

England experienced peace and progress through 1509.

 

Henry VIII, his son, married six wives and broke with the Roman Catholic Church over questions of divorce and succession.

 

Elizabeth, Henry VII’s granddaughter, reigned from 1558-1603, and the period is named for her.

 

Feudalism collapsed and a new economy took shape, which brought great prosperity to England.  Money, as well as land, was a source of power. 

 

Banking became a business in this time period.

 

It was during this time, by the way, that Columbus landed in the New World and English explorers were establishing British claims in New England.

 

During the early 1500s, a protest against the Roman Catholic Church was spreading; it was called the Protestant Reformation. 

 

Before this, the Roman Catholic Church was the only form of Christianity in western Europe.

 

Martin Luther and John Calvin criticized the established Church.

 

By the 1530s, Henry VIII aligned himself and England with the Protestants.  He wanted his marriage annulled because he wife produced no male heirs. 

 

The pope refused and Henry broke with the Church and established the Church of England (Anglican Church) and made himself its powerful head.

 

In 1588, during the reign of Elizabeth I, England became a great sea power.

 

When Elizabeth I died in 1603, her cousin James (of Scotland) became the ruler of Britain; England, Scotland, and Wales were at last ruled by ONE monarch.

 

During the Elizabethan Age, the people of Britain were made up of farmers, shepherds, merchants, scholars, clerics, nobles, robbers (highwaymen) and beggars.  People were also paid to write.

 

Renaissance means rebirth.  In this time, known as England’s Renaissance, there was a great rebirth and revived interest in science and art, and all learning flourished, echoing and earlier renaissance in Italy.

 

The people painted, sculpted, and composed music like never before and created new forms of literature, leading to great achievements.  

 

Elizabeth I helped the furthering of arts; she enjoyed theatre and literature.  Works were written about her and were dedicated to her; the artists were often seeking her sponsorship.

 

Elizabeth I also reorganized Oxford and Cambridge universities.  There was much prosperity and more luxury during her reign.

 

Shakespeare greatly influenced literature of the Renaissance Age, especially in poetic drama and the sonnet (a form of lyric poetry). 

 

Late in the era, during the time of James I, the translation of the Bible did much to raise prose writing (writing done in paragraph form), but poets were the most prolific.

 

Writers viewed writing as a profession and expected to be paid for their work.  Playwrights made little money for their work, so often they worked as actors in their plays, as did Shakespeare.

 

The period ended when James I died in 1625.

 

Terms for study                                                                     

 

Lyric poetry:  poetry dealing with the emotions of the poet

 

Sonnet:  a fourteen-line lyric poem with a fixed rhyme scheme and meter, usually iambic pentameter

 

Italian (Petrarchan) sonnet:  a fourteen-line lyric poem divided into an octave (usually rhymed abbaabba) and a sestet (usually rhymed cdecde, cdccdc, or cdedce)

 

English (Shakespearian) sonnet:  a fourteen-line lyric poem divided into three quatrains (usually rhymed abab cdcd efef) and a rhymed couplet (usually rhymed gg)

 

Spenserian sonnet:  a variation of the English sonnet (usually rhymed abab bcbc cdcd ee)

 

Spenserian stanza:  new stanza from invented by Spenser, a nine-line stanza rhyming ababbcbcc;  the last line has six iambic feet (hexameter) instead of five and is called an alexandrine

 

Meter:  in poetry, a regular, predictable pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables

 

Foot:  the basic unit of meter

 

Iamb:  type of foot, in poetic meter, in which the unstressed syllable is followed by a stressed syllable

 

Iambic pentameter:  a meter in which the predominant foot is the iamb, and there are five feet in a line (one of the most popular meters in English poetry)

 

Alexandrine:  a line of poetry in iambic hexameter (six iambs), used by Spenser in “The Faerie Queen”

 

Quatrain:  a four line poem or stanza

 

Couplet:  a two-line stanza, poem, or poetic saying; the two lines almost always rhyme

 

Heroic couplet:  two rhymed lines in iambic pentameter

 

Sestet:  a six-line poem or stanza

 

Octave:  an eight-line poem or stanza

 

Poetic drama: drama written in poetic verse, unlike today’s drama often written in vernacular form

 

Vernacular:  the language of the people

 

Interludes:  brief comedies and dialogues developed by students and teachers for campus entertainment

 

Masque:  very stylized form of drama involving dancing

 

Elegy: poem of lament

 

Pastoral verse:  poetry that portrays the simple beauty of rural life, work that depicts the simple pleasures of rural life, an idealized portrayal of rustic life, not grounded in realtiy, but exaggerated rural innocence

 

Hyperbole:  a figure of speech that uses exaggeration not intended to be taken literally, usually for emphasis or to create humor

 

Figurative language:  language that is not meant to be interpreted literally

 

Turn:  a change of direction in a work, seen often between the octave and sestet of a Petrarchan sonnet

 

Epic:  a long narrative poem that recounts, in grave and stately language, the exploits of a larger-than-life hero who usually embodies that ideals of the culture that produced him

 

Simile:  a figure of speech comparing one thing to another in a direct way, using the word like or as.

 

Metaphor:  an implied comparison between two dissimilar things in order for us to see something in a vivid, unusual way.  It’s intended to help us understand a thing better.

 

Allegory:  a work in which characters, events, and settings all represent abstract moral qualities

 

Canto:  a section or a division of a long poem

 

Personification: a figure of speech in which human qualities are given to objects, animals, or ideas

 

Verse:  poetry

 

Idyllic:   excellent and delightful in all respects, charmingly simple and serene (peaceful)

 

Prose:  writing done in paragraph form

 

Understatement:  A form of irony in which something is intentionally represented as less than it is.  Example:  “Shakespeare was a pretty good writer.”

 

Free verse:  poetry without a regular rhythm or meter

 

Psalms:  songs of praise (those in the Bible are commonly attributed to King David of Israel)

 

Enjambment:   The continuation of a complete idea (a sentence or clause) from one line or couplet of a poem to the next line or couplet without a pause. An example of enjambment can be found in the first line of Joyce Kilmer's poem Trees: “I think that I shall never see/A poem as lovely as a tree.” Enjambment comes from the French word for “to straddle.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Macbeth notes from the text:

 

Shakespeare’s plays are divided into three categories:  histories, comedies, and tragedies. Macbeth is an example of a tragedy.

 

Most of Shakespeare’s plays were first performed in the Globe Theatre.  Those who could afford it watched the plays from the seats in the gallery.  Less wealthy people paid a penny to sit on the ground; they were known as groundlings.  Plays were held in mid-afternoon, as there was no artificial light.  The plays were fast-paced.  No women appeared on stage; women’s and children’s roles were played by boys.

 

Macbeth was most likely written in 1606, early in the reign of James I, who had earlier been James VI of Scotland before coming to the English throne in 1603.  With Macbeth, a figure from Scottish history, Shakespeare paid homage to King James’s heritage.

 

Shakespeare based his play on a distorted version of actual historical events, which he’d read about in Raphael Holinshed’s “Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland.”

 

The 1606 Gunpowder Plot, a plan engineered by the Jesuits, which was designed to overthrow James and replace him with a Catholic king, also influenced the play.

 

Macbeth, while loosely based on history, is a tragedy that deals with death, morality, and destruction.  It shows how the breaking of a moral law inevitably leads to disaster.

 

In real life, Banquo was a traitor and an accomplice in the murder of the real Duncan, but in the play, he is honorable and loyal.  The real Duncan was a young, feeble and faint-hearted king, but in the play he is an older and benevolent (kind) ruler.

 

The play is very dark and the mood is set early in the play with the witches.  Though Macbeth at first seems to “have it all,” the witches foreshadow the “foul” things to come.

 

The play contains tragic irony. Duncan doesn’t realize that Macbeth is bad when he comes to stay in Macbeth’s home.  He says the home is comforting, but it is there that Macbeth kills him.  Also, Macbeth doesn’t realize that the prophesy of his being king will result in his undoing and ultimate death.

 

There is a constant opposition of binary opposites in the play:  fair / foul, good / bad, right / wrong.  It is hard to find the truth.  Macbeth is blinded by ambition and can’t see what is real.

 

Setting:  Scotland, 11th Century

 

Theme:  Evil begets evil, but evil will not prevail.  Also:  When ambition is unchecked by moral constraints, destruction is wrought.

 

It is considered bad luck to mention the play in a theatre; it is known as the Scottish play.

 

The play is in poetic verse, except for the porter scene.

 


Irony:  the awareness of a contrast between appearance and reality

 

Soliloquy:  a speech made by the actor when he is alone on stage and speaking to himself; it reveals the character’s inner thoughts and feelings for the audience

 

Aside:  words spoken by the character that other characters on the stage are not supposed to hear

 

Blank verse:  unrhymed iambic pentameter

 

Imagery:  language that appeals to the senses

 

Tragic hero:  a high-ranking person of integrity, bravery, and strength, but whose personality also includes a fatal weakness (tragic flaw) that causes the hero’s eventual decline and destruction

 

Tragic flaw:  a fatal weakness in a tragic hero

 

Hubris:  overbearing pride or presumption  (often the tragic flaw in a tragic hero)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

17th Century British Literature                           Notes from text

 

England in the 17th century was at time of political and religious turmoil, complete with shocking violence.

 

There was a struggle for power between Parliament and the throne (monarchy).

 

The ruler of England was also the ruler of the Church of England (Anglican Church).

 

Charles I alienated Parliament (which was made up mostly of Puritans who disliked the Anglican Church and the Roman Catholic Church).

 

In 1642, civil war broke out between the Royalists (supporters of the monarchy) and the supporters of Parliament.

 

Most land aristocrats supported the Royalists.  They were known for their long hair and their gallant and witty attitudes and were called cavaliers.  The plainly dressed Parliamentary forces had closely cropped hair and were known as the Roundheads.

 

Oliver Cromwell, a Puritan member of Parliament, brought a victory to the Parliamentary forces and temporarily ended the monarchy in 1649.  Charles I was beheaded.

 

The Puritans, now in charge of England, frowned upon all forms of frivolity, including the theater, which was shut down.  (Oddly enough, the Puritans had been so persecuted in England 29 years earlier that they’d left the island in search of the New World and religious freedom.)

 

Cromwell was a dictator and enacted laws that restricted personal liberties.  Catholics and Anglicans were denied freedom of worship.  Massacres were carried out against the Irish forces that challenged Puritan rule.

 

Cromwell ruled the violent period until his death in 1658.  His son, Richard, tried to fill his shoes, but by 1660, the people tired of Puritanism and restored the monarchy to a Stuart king.  His return, in 1660, began the period now referred to as The Restoration.

 

During this time, Sir Isaac Newton formulated the Law of Gravity.

 

James II came into power in 1685, but the Roman Catholic ruler was unpopular.  He was sent into exile and replaced by his daughter, Mary, who was a Protestant. 

 

In 1689, the Bill of Rights that limited a monarch’s power was enacted.  An absolute monarch would no longer reign above the law.

 

In 1665, the Great Plague swept through London killing 68,000 people.  In 1666, a great fire devastated the city.

 

The rule of James I is known as the Jacobean Age.

 

The time of rule by Charles I is referred to as the Caroline Age.

 

The Jacobean Age produced works by John Donne, who specialized in metaphysical poetry, which was filled with unusual, intellectually demanding metaphors.  Ben Johnson also introduced neo-classicism, a revival of the formal, polished forms of Ancient Greek and Rome.

 

During the Caroline Age, George Herbert was known for his religious verse and was greatly influenced by Donne’s metaphysical work.  Robert Herrick, also writing in the Caroline Age, was famous for his short musical lyric verse, which showed the influence of Ben Johnson.  He is one of the most famous of the “Sons of Ben,” which was how the Caroline poets who had been influenced by Johnson were known.  Herrick was a Cavalier poet who took the side of the Royalists during the war.

 

Andrew Marvel, a Caroline poet, showed characteristics of both Donne and Johnson.

 

Marvel and John Milton were on the Parliamentary (Puritan) side of the war.

 

Milton is the greatest poet of the century; he developed his own remarkable writing style.

 

After The Restoration, in theatre, the comedy of manners became most popular.  The upper class became the source of humor in these satirical works.  For the first time, now that theatre had been restored, women acted on stage.

 

Prose works of the century were mostly non-fiction:  essays, histories, criticisms, etc.  The one exception is John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress, an allegory about a hero named Christian working his way toward heaven.

 

The term "Metaphysical Poet" was first coined by the critic Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) and he used it as a disparaging term.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Romantic Age                             1798 – 1837

 

The Romantic Age saw a lot of creative energy.  The writers of this period knew that something dramatic and unique was being produced.

 

In the late 1700s, the French Revolution greatly influenced Britain.  Many Britons sympathized with the revolutionaries.  Once the revolutionists were in power, though, they became violent.  The period was known as the Reign of Terror, and the terrible behavior made it difficult for the Brits to continue their support.

 

From 1793 – 1815 Britain warred with France in the Napoleonic Wars.  Bonaparte became emperor of France in 1804.  The Battle of Waterloo ended Bonaparte’s power in 1815.  France returned to an absolute monarchy and democratic idealists were crushed.

 

George III ruled England from 1760 – 1820, but was declared insane in 1811.  His son (George, the Prince of Wales), was named stand in ruler until his father’s death.  Then George became King George IV and began his own 10-year reign.

 

Britons underwent a lot of the same problems with King George and his followers as Americans did.  (This was the time of the American Revolution.)  Not until 1832 could more than 5% of adult males have the right to vote for parliamentary members. 

 

The Industrial Revolution, which started in the 1760s, produced drastic social and economic changes.  The agricultural nation transformed into an urbanized, industrialized one.  Agricultural workers were paid less and land fell into the hands of few, more powerful people. 

 

The new working class was made up of poor factory workers facing long hours, harsh treatment, and bad health.  Children were exploited, as they were a cheap source of labor.

 

Slave trade was made illegal in British colonies in 1807, and slavery was abolished in 1833.  Most rich people were indifferent to the plight of the poor, but there were some sympathizers. 

 

Writings of the Romantic Era emphasized human adventure, passion, delight, and love of splendor, extravagance, and the supernatural.  The works emphasized human emotions, much as the works of American Romantic (transcendental) writers.  The writers realized that there was more to life than reason alone.

 

They focused on experiment, the individual, rural life, nature-loving, imagination, emotion, the mysterious, the supernatural, common life, the primitive, independence, spontaneity, and, above all, nature.

 

The Romantic Age in English literature began in 1798 with the publication of Lyrical Ballads, a collaboration between William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. 

 

The work was revolutionary and reflected spontaneity, emotion, and the supernatural.  It was a reaction to the dehumanizing Industrial Age.

 

The five greatest poets of the age were:  Wordsworth, Coleridge, Shelley, Byron & Keats.

 

Not much drama was produced during this period.  There was some closet drama, which was made up of poetic dramatic works that were meant to be read rather than acted out. 

 

The gothic novel was popular at the time.  A gothic novel is one that has a gloomy, foreboding setting and that contains strong elements of horror, mystery and the supernatural.  Frankenstein is probably the most famous.

 

Jane Austin was another famous novelist of the era.  Her works were less romantic; instead, she focused on domestic situations and the plight of females in the age.  Her novels are more like our novels today and were conversation driven.  Pride and Prejudice is her most famous work.


 

 

 

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Unit IV:  Hamlet

 

full title  · The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark

 

Shakespeare’s plays are divided into three categories:  histories, comedies, and tragedies. Hamlet is an example of a tragedy.

 

Most of Shakespeare’s plays were first performed in the Globe Theatre.  Those who could afford it watched the plays from the seats in the gallery.  Less wealthy people paid a penny to sit on the ground; they were known as groundlings.  Plays were held in mid-afternoon, as there was no artificial light.  The plays were fast-paced.  No women appeared on stage; women’s and children’s roles were played by boys.

 

Hamlet was written around the year 1600 in the final years of the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, who had been the monarch of England for more than forty years and was then in her late sixties. The prospect of Elizabeth’s death and the question of who would succeed her was a subject of grave anxiety at the time, since Elizabeth had no children, and the only person with a legitimate royal claim, James of Scotland, was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots, and therefore represented a political faction to which Elizabeth was opposed. (When Elizabeth died in 1603, James did inherit the throne, becoming King James I.)  It is no surprise, then, that many of Shakespeare’s plays from this period, including Hamlet, concern transfers of power from one monarch to the next.

 

Hamlet is a tragedy that deals with death and the impossibility of uncertainty.  It shows how the breaking of a moral law inevitably leads to disaster.

 

The play is very dark and the mood is set early in the play with the appearance of the ghost.  As Hamlet becomes crazier, and people continue to die, the work grows darker.

 

The play is in poetic verse.

 

author  · William Shakespeare                                            

 

type of work  · Play

 

date of first publication  · 1603, in a pirated quarto edition titled The Tragicall Historie of Hamlet; 1604 in a superior quarto edition

 

protagonist  · Hamlet

 

major conflict · Hamlet feels a responsibility to avenge his father’s murder by his uncle Claudius, but Claudius is now the king and thus well protected. Moreover, Hamlet struggles with his doubts about whether he can trust the ghost and whether killing Claudius is the appropriate thing to do.

 

setting (time)  · The late medieval period, though the play’s chronological setting is notoriously imprecise

 

settings (place)  · Denmark

 

foreshadowing  · The ghost, which is taken to foreshadow an ominous future for Denmark

 

tone  · Dark, ironic, melancholy, passionate, contemplative, desperate, violent

 

themes  · The impossibility of certainty; the complexity of action; the mystery of death; the nation as a diseased body

 

motifs  · Incest and incestuous desire; ears and hearing; death and suicide; darkness and the supernatural; misogyny

 

symbols  · The ghost (the spiritual consequences of death); Yorick’s skull (the physical consequences of death)

 

Irony:  the awareness of a contrast between appearance and reality

 

Soliloquy:  a speech made by the actor when he is alone on stage and speaking to himself; it reveals the character’s inner thoughts and feelings for the audience

 

Aside:  words spoken by the character that other characters on the stage are not supposed to hear

 

Blank verse:  unrhymed iambic pentameter

 

Imagery:  language that appeals to the senses

 

Tragic hero:  a high-ranking person of integrity, bravery, and strength, but whose personality also includes a fatal weakness (tragic flaw) that causes the hero’s eventual decline and destruction

 

Tragic flaw:  a fatal weakness in a tragic hero

 

Try to figure out Hamlet’s tragic flaw.

 

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