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Line By Line Shakespeare
Canada
Приєднався 31 сер 2017
Line by line, explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention!
Line by Line Analysis: Was Shakespeare Actually Edward de Vere?
I've borrowed some lines for this video:
"I am not as I seem to be, / For when I smile I am not glad;" - Oxford poem, signed E. O. The Paradise of Dainty Devices, 1576
"As it should pierce a hundred thousand hearts." - Oberon, a Midsummer Night's Dream
"She hath the hand and knife, / That may both save and end my life." - XII. Love and Antagonism. Edward de Vere.
"The fox barks not when he would steal the lamb." - Suffolk, King Henry VI.
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A big thank-you to Elizabeth Winkler for her book "Shakespeare was a Woman" and Diana Price's "Unorthodox Biography." Please get in touch if you'd like to know the source of any illustration, clip-art, photograph, or animation.
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✅ Connect on Twitter: @LBL_Shakespeare
"I am not as I seem to be, / For when I smile I am not glad;" - Oxford poem, signed E. O. The Paradise of Dainty Devices, 1576
"As it should pierce a hundred thousand hearts." - Oberon, a Midsummer Night's Dream
"She hath the hand and knife, / That may both save and end my life." - XII. Love and Antagonism. Edward de Vere.
"The fox barks not when he would steal the lamb." - Suffolk, King Henry VI.
Join this channel to get access to perks:
ua-cam.com/channels/QXUz37eJUjY10ap2j2P5uA.htmljoin
Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare
A big thank-you to Elizabeth Winkler for her book "Shakespeare was a Woman" and Diana Price's "Unorthodox Biography." Please get in touch if you'd like to know the source of any illustration, clip-art, photograph, or animation.
🔴 Subscribe for more Line by Line Shakespeare: ua-cam.com/channels/QXUz37eJUjY10ap2j2P5uA.html
✅ Connect on Twitter: @LBL_Shakespeare
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Відео
Line by Line: All of Shakespeare's Most Popular Sonnets
Переглядів 249Рік тому
Join this channel to get access to perks: ua-cam.com/channels/QXUz37eJUjY10ap2j2P5uA.htmljoin Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through one of Shakespeare’s sonnets with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. A big thank-you to the following resources. Without such resources, thi...
Line by Line: Shakespeare's Sonnet 147
Переглядів 825Рік тому
Join this channel to get access to perks: ua-cam.com/channels/QXUz37eJUjY10ap2j2P5uA.htmljoin Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through one of Shakespeare’s sonnets with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. A big thank-you to the following resources. Without such resources, thi...
Line by Line: Shakespeare's Sonnet 146
Переглядів 311Рік тому
Join this channel to get access to perks: ua-cam.com/channels/QXUz37eJUjY10ap2j2P5uA.htmljoin Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through one of Shakespeare’s sonnets with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. A big thank-you to the following resources. Without such resources, thi...
Line by Line: Shakespeare's Sonnet 144
Переглядів 525Рік тому
Join this channel to get access to perks: ua-cam.com/channels/QXUz37eJUjY10ap2j2P5uA.htmljoin Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through one of Shakespeare’s sonnets with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. A big thank-you to the following resources. Without such resources, thi...
Line by Line: Shakespeare's Sonnet 142
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Join this channel to get access to perks: ua-cam.com/channels/QXUz37eJUjY10ap2j2P5uA.htmljoin Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through one of Shakespeare’s sonnets with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. A big thank-you to the following resources. Without such resources, thi...
Line by Line: Shakespeare's Sonnet 141
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Join this channel to get access to perks: ua-cam.com/channels/QXUz37eJUjY10ap2j2P5uA.htmljoin Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through one of Shakespeare’s sonnets with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. A big thank-you to the following resources. Without such resources, thi...
Line by Line: Shakespeare's Sonnet 139
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Join this channel to get access to perks: ua-cam.com/channels/QXUz37eJUjY10ap2j2P5uA.htmljoin Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through one of Shakespeare’s sonnets with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. A big thank-you to the following resources. Without such resources, thi...
Line by Line: Shakespeare's Sonnet 10
Переглядів 473Рік тому
Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through one of Shakespeare’s sonnets with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. A big thank-you to the following resources. Without such resources, this video would not have been possible: No Fear Shakespeare, the Oxford Shakespeare, the Arden S...
Line by Line: Shakespeare's Sonnet 9
Переглядів 377Рік тому
Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through one of Shakespeare’s sonnets with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. A big thank-you to the following resources. Without such resources, this video would not have been possible: No Fear Shakespeare, the Oxford Shakespeare, the Arden S...
Line by Line: A Midsummer Night's Dream, the Complete Play
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Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through Shakespeare’s "A Midsummer Night's Dream" with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. 0:00 Act 1, Scene 1 22:09 Act 1, Scene 2 30:56 Act 2, Scene 1 52:33 Act 2, Scene 2 1:05:40 Act 3, Scene 1 1:20:00 Act 3, Scene 2 1:52:49 Act 4, Scene 1 ...
Line by Line: Macbeth, the Complete Play
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Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through Macbeth with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. 0:00 Act 1, Scene 1 1:34 Act 1, Scene 2 9:30 Act 1, Scene 3 25:56 Act 1, Scene 4 32:27 Act 1, Scene 5 41:18 Act 1, Scene 6 44:59 Act 1, Scene 7 53:48 Act 2, Scene 1 1:02:06 Act 2, Scene ...
Line by Line: Shakespeare's Sonnet 8
Переглядів 955Рік тому
Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through one of Shakespeare’s sonnets with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shakespeare's gift for language and invention. A big thank-you to the following resources. Without such resources, this video would not have been possible: No Fear Shakespeare, the Oxford Shakespeare, the Arden S...
Line by Line: Percy Bysshe Shelley's "Ozymandias"
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Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through Percy Bysshe Shelley's "Ozymandias" with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Shelley's gift for language and invention. Please get in touch if you'd like to know the source of any illustration, clip-art, photograph, or animation. 🔴 Subscribe for more Line by Line Shakespeare: ua-ca...
Line by Line: William Wordsworth's "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud"
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Check out my Patreon: www.patreon.com/linebylineshakespeare This video will take you through William Wordsworth's "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" with text and visual annotations. Line by line, you'll explore Wordsworth's gift for language and invention. Please get in touch if you'd like to know the source of any illustration, clip-art, photograph, or animation. 🔴 Subscribe for more Line by Line...
Line by Line: Othello, Othello's "Had it pleased heaven" (4.2)
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Line by Line: Othello, Othello's "Had it pleased heaven" (4.2)
Line by Line Analysis: Who is More Evil? Macbeth or Lady Macbeth?
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Line by Line Analysis: Who is More Evil? Macbeth or Lady Macbeth?
Line by Line: Othello, Desdemona's "Something sure of state" (3.4)
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Line by Line: Othello, Desdemona's "Something sure of state" (3.4)
Line by Line Analysis: Three Quotations that Perfectly Capture Lady Macbeth
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Line by Line Analysis: Three Quotations that Perfectly Capture Lady Macbeth
Line by Line: Othello, Desdemona's "Alas, thrice-gentle Cassio!" (3.4)
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Line by Line: Othello, Desdemona's "Alas, thrice-gentle Cassio!" (3.4)
Line by Line: Othello, Othello's "Think'st thou I'd make a life of jealousy" (3.3)
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Line by Line: Othello, Othello's "Think'st thou I'd make a life of jealousy" (3.3)
Line by Line: Othello, Othello's "This fellow's of exceeding honesty" (3.3)
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Line by Line: Othello, Othello's "This fellow's of exceeding honesty" (3.3)
Line by Line Analysis: How Does Mark Antony Persuade the Crowd?
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Line by Line Analysis: How Does Mark Antony Persuade the Crowd?
Class 10 and 9 ICSE students.... attendance here........
🤣
Loved! Thank you.
Thank you sooo much for this!
This could have been an amazing 10 minute video without all the unnecessary pauses. I understand adding pauses sometimes for emphasis but holy crap.
I'm used to teaching ESL students. I'm thinking of upping the pace for future videos.
The tragedy of Julius Caesar is a great example of why you don't play the hero. Why you should never care for "the greater good". Why you should forgo patriotism and above all else how showing mercy to your enemies is a fool's errand. Caesar had been a savoir to the people and fixed all the problems with the Roman society and government, along with showing mercy to the Romans who had been enemies to him. And look how quickly the rable was fickle towards him? Don't stand up for anyone. If you stand up for those who will not stand up for themselves those same cowards will stab you in the back. God forgives no traitor, neither should you. Those who have betrayed you are those who will betray you.
Sounds like the prince by Machiavelli. There are two side to the ideal and they make sense for a ruler and being good.
Thank you for this commentary. I successfully employed it.
Not a bad effort by an American
For all you know we're from the same country.
I'm sorry but your reading is lame there is no feeling or life in your narration, fith graders could read better then you
Thank you! This helps me a lot as an English teacher, currently I'm teaching about Sonnets.
Oh, good luck with your work :)
Great job - I truly enjoyed your interpretation
Ingratitude, more strong than traitor s arms. Brilliant
I heard Antoni speech as a poems but l con't understand yet .Thanks for your help.
Nice vid!
Thank you very much!
Show the Brando Mark Anthony speech
"Show it! Show it now!" - Die-hard fan 😅
I’m just a new user to ytb,but I think it’s the best video I’ve seen.and this is my first comment on ytb❤
I'm honoured!!
22:15 In some versions of the text, Caesar is said to have left every Roman 75 drachma. A drachma was, roughly speaking, enough money to feed a citizen for one full day (in other words, three full meals by Roman standards). In other words, Caesar gave a million people enough money to feed themselves for two-and-a-half months!
I loved your exposition. And I am a teacher, also. Thank you
Reverse psychology
Ladies and gentleme!! NO DOUBT this is the ONLY and INCREDIBLE speech that a man can ever knit out in a few minutes , without secretaires, television , PC advance preparationm etc etc ,,and turn from UP to DOWN Roman PEOPLE's mind and opinion! according to my mind NEVER this can be reapeted by a political man or lady to day and in the future!|
Impressive. You have just earned a new subscriber
Thank you!
Ο μαρλον μπραντο επαιξε απιστευτα ωραια αυτο το μονολογο
Ναι, μου άρεσε πολύ αυτή η ταινία.
@@LineByLineShakespeare Διάβασα πρόσφατα τη βιογραφία του ομολογώ ότι δεν ήξερα τίποτα για τον Μάρλον πέρα από το ότι ήταν ηθοποιός .Πραγματικά έπαθα πλάκα όταν διάβασα για της απόψεις του πάνω στα θέματα εξουσίας ,αδικίας μοιάζουν τόσο πολυ με τις δικές μου που είναι σαν να έγραψα εγώ το βιβλίο .Ήταν ένας εξαιρετικός άνθρωπος πολύ μπροστά από την εποχή του ένας άνθρωπος που γεννήθηκε για εμάς στο παρελθόν αλλά μοιάζει να έχει ζήσει στο παρόν .Αν είχα την ευκαιρία να φέρω πίσω στη ζωή έστω για 24 ώρες κάποιον για να το γνωρίσω αυτός θα ήταν ο Μάρλον
17:17 It's also an example of irony from the perspective of Shakespeare's audience (and of course us). Because there was in fact another Caesar, Caesar Augustus!
Thanks a lot ❤
Shakespeare: wtf I was saying
This is exactly what I've been looking for for a few weeks. I'm a songwriter who is studying Shakespeare to learn more about rhetorical devices to use in my songwriting and this is perfect for helping me get what is really going on. So much easier than trying to read a book while listening, etc.
So glad you're enjoying it (helping you understand what's going on!) and using it for your songwriting.
Historically, Caesar was similar to a Democrat fighting for the middle class while the senators were more like Republicans fighting for the wealthy. The senators were all very wealthy and owned a large portion of the land, wealth and means of production. The distribution of wealth and resources were heavily skewed to the few wealthy at the expense of the masses. For example, there was massive unemployment because the average Roman citizen had to compete with slaves for work. Caesar wanted to reform land ownership, labor, and tax the wealthy and was seen as a man of the people. This is why he was assassinated. The senators didn't win in the end. The economic situation wasn't sustainable and eventually his heir, Augustus became emperor. And the age of the emperor's began because citizens were so sick of the corrupt senators that they threw their support to a dictator to keep them in line.
he was also on the eve of a MAJOR campaign against the Persians, who had recently OBLITERATED *SEVERAL* roman legions, and Caesar was a good enough general that he actually had a shot at avenging such humiliation. if he had succeeded, he could have done ANYTHING and been completely politically untouchable and the Senators who killed him knew it. that was why they had to kill him then and not later.
My dad has given me my Grandpa's set of "The Harvard Classics." I have been re-reading Shakespeare. However, "Julius Ceasar" (my favorite Shakespeare in school and in college) isn't included in the volumes. I saved most of my books from 7th grade on, and I recently picked this book up again after going through Hamlet and King Lear. Something struck me about this speech, as it is obviously famous within theater and cinema and is Shakespeare's interpretation of what Antony really said. I always noticed the repitition of those words, like anyone else. I remember my 8th grade teacher using the words "over saturation for effect" or something like that. But this breakdown was absolutely incredible. The seven ways that you describe how this speech was crafted manipulated, putting us in the shoes of Antony writing it is really special. This summer, I have been dedicating hours of my nights to reading just 10 volumes of the "Harvard Classics," I went through Homer and Virgil, but Shakespeare always make me slow down. It is necessary to study the text. And your intro, by inserting yourself and asking "What was Antony's task and objective," in effect, really excites me to go back through the Shakespeare Volume again! Thank you for this great video! Literature and writing is my passion. You, my Honorable man (I only said that once), have opened a can of worms! Cheers!
this pro-ceaser bais is very disappointing
Isn’t O judgment! A personification?
Very slow.... explanation
Oh..... great no words to say. Thank a lot ❤
Thankyou, i am currently learning Shakespeare in my Acting course and this helps better than the text books to understand the intention behind the sonnet and what the speaker is feeling. Thankyou. 😊
huh? brutus persuaded the roman people of only one thing: the peace they were enjoying was officially over
Thank you!! This will really help me a lot to perform this monologue in school
its zero % edward de vere. ua-cam.com/video/3L9zqmlpMJ4/v-deo.html
is this for children from a kindergarden?
Sorry, I'm not sure why you would think that.
Screws us all!? You mean like communism
Whatever floats your moat.
I think, perhaps, you've missed an element of Sarcasm in the whole speech. By the time Antony has repeated "honorable" for the 6-millionth time, EVERYone knows he means something else. "I don't mean to stir you to violence and revolt" -- when that's Exactly what he's doing. In any case, Antony's speech is a masterpiece of careful balance coupled with a bit of daring. You did a GOOD Job, here.
Okay
I'd just finished analysing this speech for rhetorical techniques. I could have saved my time!! That said - it's really good to see that I got most of them. Great video. Thanks for posting.
My pleasure, and I'm glad you tried it on your own first :) A blessing in disguise.
I should add though, @@LineByLineShakespeare, your analysis was far more informed, coherent and lucid than my own! As I said - I wish I had seen your video first.
Thank you, brother. It is great!❤
1:00 Thats the same argument they used on cataline. Caesar oposed it then too
Really I enjoyed the narration.
It's interesting that Anthony's examples of Caesar's lack of ambition prove nothihg of the sort. Bringing slaves and treasure back to Rome was part and parcel of gaining status in ancient Rome. So was constructing buildings or other facilities for general use. Also, Casear was considered one of the "populares", so it's no surprise that he would have shown concern for the lower orders. Any ambitious Roman in Public life would have have been likely to do the same. As for refusing the crown, well maybe Casca was right: "... as I told you, he put it by once; but for all that, to my thinking, he would fain have had it.", and the whole thing was problably a bit of political theatre...kite-flying on Casar's part to gauge the public mood.
These are really good points. I'll be sure to mention them next time I'm teaching this play to a group of students. Thank you for your thoughts :)
Excellent..you are an honourable man ❤
Caesar also gave himself dictator for life and openly made more monarchical movements towards the title of king
...which makes it all the more impressive that Mark Antony convinced everybody otherwise? Maybe!
Thrice he did reject a kingly crown
So nice man... One of the best explanation I came across.. well done ✅
I don't think that Antony disliked Caesar's death. He knew it was coming and kept silence. Shakespeare was not psychologicaly balanced.
In the film version of Julius Caesar starring Marlon Brando as Mark Antony, it is clear that Mark Antony is pretending to be more hurt and sad than he actually is. So you've got a point: Antony might not have disliked Caesar's death. He may have just used it to his advantage...
Excellent explanation with art. Worth work.