Regarding your question about the tying together of sibilance ("Sudden successive flights of bullets streak the silence") and alliteration in "Pale flakes with fingering stealth come feeling for our faces": The sibilance of the 's' sound is a lot more harsh than the softer labiodental fricative 'f', which shows that while the bullets rush past suddenly and rapidly, the snowflakes' fall is gentle and evocatively beautiful but no less deadly. 6G English ye boiiiiiiiiiiii wut
Clarity Johnston I used what you said in my exam haha and the teachers loved it. Unfortunately, even though I talked about the literary device, I didn't completely say what it did and so get the full marks for it
I've got several interpretations of the sibilance, mention them all and you're guaranteed the alternative interpretation marks: 1. Complex method to use: Shows the free time they have on the front, portrays the futility of war as its simply who can outlast the other 2. S's are often onomatopoeic of shivering: References the idea of the weather being dangerous and the main danger of the front; they're dying from exposure. 3. May be onomatopoeic of the winds and bullets 4. S's don't necessarily need to be read softly. They can make harsh sounds to portray the frustration of Owens. There's no reason why it can't be all of the above or other interpretations.
Although im cramming all these poems for next weeks exam, and hate the brutal impossible timings we have in the paper to do 3 essays and 1 analysation in 2hr 15 mins, I can say that Mr Bruff is bringing some joy to these analysations! At first I looked at them as boring expressionless texts that AQA threw in, but now that i've watched his videos, I feel empathy and emotion with each poet. Thankyou Mr Bruff.
The paratactic language found in line 4 (Worried by silence, sentries whisper, curious, nervous) also accentuates the build up of tension- the soldiers are losing their cognitive ability and are omitting conjunctions due to their ‘aching’ brains
any1 here in 2021, my siblings used to watch these and i started 2 yrs ago too. helps loads, mr bruff, im sure i once sent a message saying mr bruff knows his stuff, and u replied . it was few yrs ago, btw thank you sooo much for the help
For anyone who may be interested: 'silence, sentries, whisper, curious, nervous' the noticeable technique used is sibilance, which may be able to portray how much time was spent when thinking. The first two words 'silence, sentries may be interpreted to show that it was thought of quite fast as both words start with 's', creating that almost hissing sound, but as it carries on, it can be noticed that the next three words only contain that 's' sound within the word and not at the beginning, which may show how much free time and how much more thought was given as 'nothing happens'. Also, it may show each word's importance: 'silence' was the most important as the enemies could easily sneak up, it was worrying, but then it was 'sentries' which shows how human life was the 2nd most important thing on the list. Other inferences can be made regarding the other three words but that is the general idea.
Just want to tell you what an amazing thing it is that you're doing. You're helping a lot of students who perhaps didn't have the best of teachers and were falling behind because of this. Thank you!
I'd also say that the sibilance also reflects the "merciless winds that knife" the soldiers. The 's' sounds portray a vivid image of the wind and its attacking nature which has been criticised by Owen. The reader can sympathise with the shivering soldiers who believe they have nowhere to go, as even the nature's 'doors are closed', and in fact, nature uses its power in a rather assaultive manner.
'S' is almost a sinister sound (like you said), so when Owen is talking about the bullets streaking the silence, it may be a sinister hiss in the background that adds to the evilness(?) of war. Bullets can also have a sort of hissing sound, and if they are hitting the snow, then that would probably make a hissing sound. The 'f' in flakes kind of accentuates the idea of the flakes being stealthy (for me). 'F' is quite silent and can be put in a sentence without really knowing it's there, so I think the using of that letter is very good in there since it is stealthy by just being itself. That's my analysis ^^
I was thinking the sibilance with the successive flights of bullets could represent the breathing patterns of the soldiers which reinforces the idea that they are nervous and continuously on edge, also the use of “the” could identify the intake of breath and tue slowing down of the hyperventilating soldiers
I got moved from set one to set three, and the teacher thinks we’re all dumb so doesn’t even analyse properly, so i’m having to come to your videos for a proper analysis! Thank you soo much!
Thank you so much: I've been listening to a number of these in preparation for my exam tomorrow, and you've provided such strong alternative arguments and interpretations, it is fantastic. In regards to sibilance with biblical context, could you argue that the hissing sound relates to the sound of the snake, and the subtle persuasion of nature to the soldiers, weakening them and almost taking away their religion?
the sibilance emphasises the silence the soldiers face as they desperately wait for something to happen. It's very powerful as silence is obviously no noise but the poet makes the silence auditory
Thank you so much for posting this video, you have helped me hugely with my homework and my school work u sir are a miracle and a hero. We also use ur videos in lessons to help us to make notes
Actually, we are the ones who should be thanking you for making this BRILLIANT video, not you thanking us for watching it 😍 You, sir, are saving our grades.🕺🏻 Subscribed✌🏻
You helped me analyse poetry at GCSE and now you've done it again for my A-levels. This is one of the poems my class has studied from the Wilfred Owen anthology for our 'WWI and its aftermath' paper, but Exposure has to be one of my favourites. Your analysis is and has always been fantastic. Thank you so much! :)
Just wanted to give my personal take on the line “dawn massing east her melancholy army”. The noun “dawn” may link to ideas of happiness and warmth which may reflect the purpose of the soldiers fighting but also is presented to those oblivious to it’s harsh nature, criticising how it is seen as a positive, possibly divine, force. Just my thoughts, please reply to let me know your views 🙂
This is they key to passing my english gcse! 😂 The analysis of the line "for love of God seems dying" was so deep, definetly the best poetry analysis ever
Just so y'all know: "all their eyes are ice" can be interpreted as the soldiers having become desensitised to the brutality of of death, and how nature (and war to that end) has taken them over and left them numb and cold, both figuratively and literally.
I think the constant repetition of the word 'dying' in the refrains all throughout the poem reflect the fact that the soldiers are suffering a long, drawn-out death due to nature. Even when some soldiers do eventually die in the last verse, 'nothing happens' as a result - the soldiers' agonising deaths are shown to just be completely futile. We should be shocked by the fact that some soldiers have actually died, but by this point everyone has become so numbed by the harsh weather conditions that some actual human deaths are just something else amongst the normal suffering the soldiers see everyday - in fact, it's like 'nothing' has even happened...
Wow, thank you! This video just helped me fill two A4 sides with everything. I've also done this with 'Ozymandias' and it really does help in lesson. Greatly appreciated. :)
Hi i just wanted to take this opportunity to thank you on how much you have taught me and helped me to improve my work.I really look forward to your future videos as always.I just finished watching your videos on the language ones.Thanks a lot.
Can the sibilance reflect the striving of the wind. Also, the fact that sibilance reminds of the hissing of a snake, the wind can be seen to be personified as a threat to the soldiers??
im in year 11 and my grade for English literature is a 4.I been revising for days non stop but idk if it is helping me. At the end of the day im doing past papers but is like all my knowledge is forgotten from these videos
It was amazing and it DID help me a lot thank you so much Mr bruff I will use it in my essay once again Thank you U are AMAZING Your explanations were excellent!!! thx a lot
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The sibilance could be interpreted as soldiers gathered around in small groups (linking to the amount of sibilance to the amount of soldiers ) and the ss sound created by sibilance could be the soldiers in the tension of the moment telling each other to hush as their tension builds furthermore adding to the fact the nothing happens, like in a game of hide and seek waiting to be caught the tension builds but then they walk past and nothing happens but the tension is still there and you tell each other to shh. Thank you by the way for this extremely helpful video.
Can u say that the use of sibilance suggests that the soldiers are paranoid of enemy attack, they are confused if it is the weather or the enemy attacking them. The hissing 's' might also suggest it is almost like a sanke waiting for its prey to leap
Thank you so much for making these videos, I have listened to this one and it has helped so much with my English work. Will definitely subscribe!! 👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
About the Keats thing, you could reference this poem to a loss of identity and could you maybe say the contrast between Keat feeling numb from the beauty of the nightingale and Owen being literally numb from the cold shows how he’s lost his sense of self and what he loved by almost mocking the poem?
Sibilance of the the letter ess implies shivers or the nerves of the war and is unexpected like the horrors of war and adds to the disoriented nature of life in the battlefield.
23:55 i know this is a super old video but i just wanted to point out that this section of the bible actually kind of means the opposite. Jesus is saying that even though people may hear of conflict and may feel that it is a sign that the end of the world is approaching, that this is not the case and that the "the end is not yet". this could highlight how the war feels like an endless purgatory for the soldiers, in which they are neither able to return home nor given the relief of death.
Hello sir, could you please mark this: Man is often portrayed as being in conflict with nature. Explore the ways in which nature is portrayed as the enemy of man in 'Exposure' and one other poem from 'Power and Conflict'. [30 marks] The poem 'Exposure' was a protest poem written by Wilfred Owen about his experiences in the trenches of WW1. Despite the traditional wartime dangers of guns and bombs, the biggest enemy of man is presented as nature, which is viewed as more powerful and threatening. 'The Prelude' is an epic poem describing the moment the poet's view of nature changed when he encountered a large mountain as a young boy and realised the danger it posed to humanity. In 'Exposure', the threat created by nature was mainly physical, where as in 'The Prelude', it was mostly psychological. In 'Exposure', nature is first introduced as a threat in the first line- the 'merciless iced east winds' 'knive' the soldiers. This is a violent action, and as winds cannot have 'mercy', they are personified to reflect their cruetly and status as a direct enemy opposed to man rather than a neutral natural occurrence. First person plural pronouns such as 'Us' and 'our' to show that the impacts of the destructive power of nature are universal, and this creates a sense of comradeship among the soldiers. We could also assume that the enemy must be affected by such harsh weather conditions. Perhaps it would be better for everyone if the fighting ended. The opening phrase of the poem 'Our brains ache' is particularly significant - this was inspired by the start of a poem by John Keats 'My heart aches'. Keats was a Romantic poet, and this original line reflected how happy he was made by the beauty of nature. Owen read a lot of Keats' poetry during his early life, and he had initially believed that poems should focus on beauty, until after entering the trenches of WW1, he realised that poems must cover harsh and painful subjects, such as war. In contrast to the Romantic movement, which celebrates the beauty of nature, nature is seen as the common enemy of all of humanity in Exposure. In 'The Prelude', nature is initially presented as a friend of humanity. This is symbolised by the opening line 'One summer morning (led by her) I found'. This creates a very vivid (as he remembers one particular morning) and almost romantic image of nature. At this point in his life, Wordsworth clearly viewed man as equal to nature, rather than as being in conflict with it. However, it is implied that he had known the truth about man's inferiority all along, and had been subconsciously supressing it. 'Led by her' is placed in brackets, as though as an afterthought. He was being led and controlled by a personified version of nature, reflecting its dominance. Unlike in 'Exposure', he believes in the façade of his own power and is 'Proud of his skill' of being able to row the boat straight. The poem is split into roughly three sections - the first, at which he is in love with nature, the second, where he becomes terrified of nature, and the third, where he reflects philosophically on his encounter with nature. The entire poem is one long stanza, initially reflecting his enchantment with the natural world, but soon coming to suggest he is emotionally overwhelmed and unable to comprehend what he has witnessed. There is significant enjambment throughout the first section as he paints beautiful, pastel images of the 'glittering' 'moon' and the 'sparkling light' reflecting off of the water. Rather than enemy soldiers, the narrator believes the real threat is that which is posed by nature - the only force capable of causing man's extinction. In the fourth stanza 'Sudden successive flights of bullets streak the silence' uses sibilance. The soft sounds may suggest that the narrator is not afraid of enemy gunfire, and may even be welcoming death as an escape from the perpetual suffering and purposelessness of war. Malicious nature seems to kill more people in war than the enemy - cold air comes 'feeling for our faces' with 'fingering stealth'. This is deliberate, and the fricative alliteration emphasises the brutality and the relentlessness of such extreme weather conditions. The wind is seen as allied with the enemy as it 'Attacks' in 'shivering ranks of grey'. Grey was the colour of the German soldiers' uniforms. Dawn, which is supossed to symbolise light, hope and a new day, is not portrayed in the positive way it is in most poems (which directly rejects Romantic beliefs about nature) - it 'mass[es] in the east [its] melancholy army'. A fight against nature being hopeless due to the latter's immense power is again shown in the last stanza. The soldiers attempt to stay warm with a fire, but the flames burn like 'dark-red jewels'. Precious, but cold. In 'The Prelude', nature's effect on the narrator is mainly psychological. His thoughts are left tourmented for days after encountering such 'huge and mighty' forms of nature. The young boy is profoundly affected and left in a state of 'darkness', either 'solitude / Or blank desertion'. He now understands the unsafe position of humanity in the world, and realises how weak it is in contrast to the hugeness of nature. He does not fully describe what he now thinks of nature, rather what he cannot. There are 'no pleasant images of trees', and 'no colours of green fields'. The technique of polysyndeton is used as 'no' is repeated to describe what there is not. This creates a picture of a terrifyingly powerful nature, incomprehensible to humans due to the weaknesses of our minds. The strength of nature is 'unknown' to humans. This poem serves as a warning to not underestimate the power of the natural world. When the poet was young, he made the mistake of thinking he could challenge nature and dominate it. It is likely that William Wordsworth wanted people to remember their place in the world and understand their limited levels of power. In conclusion, both poems present fairly similar images of nature, both presenting nature as the greatest enemy of man rather than other humans. 'The Prelude' describes the poet's initial, romanticised views of nature, before he realised its sheer immensity. 'Exposure' presents nature as the ultimate killer of man in war - 'Shrivelling many hands' and causing people to freeze to death before 'bullets' can reach them. Nature is potrayed as a 'merciless' and 'mad' enemy, dangerous because it is not a human and has no control over itself.
Your video really helped me to understand the poem since I didn't have any understanding of it before or its meaning. But I've found in your previous videos I've seen (I'm watching them in anthology order, not upload order) you clearly lay out the form and structure, but in this video there was no specific form section. I'm guessing some of the points you brought up were related to form, but which ones? Like does caesura come under form? The rhyme scheme? Etc. Thanks
Hey MrBuff these peom videos helped me out alot. I was wondering if you could add in a exam question and a written responce so that we can see what to include in the essay
thankyou so much Mr bruff- this was so helpful and watching your videos has become a routine for me lol every night- I wonder which unseen poem will come up in this year's gcse exam- I have a feeling it'll be checking out me history because that's one of the hardest poems and they like to challenge us
I can't remember if I heard it, but a contextual thing is that war was seen as something brave and heroic people take part in, but the title of this poem is used very well by Wilfred Owen as it exposes the actuality of war and how they are waiting and being so worried, it presents some sort of monotonous tone, it's boring, just like the soldiers felt boredom whilst waiting maybe 3 hours + just waiting for something to happen.
How would you even use the context of john keats in the exposure analysis? Could you use his reference or is this bit of context just something useful we could know?
Check out my ultimate 'Power and Conflict' poetry analysis video: 3 key points for all 15 poems 👉 ua-cam.com/video/urXta6o-7Xg/v-deo.html
Deserve a round of applause for all the GCSE students lives you have saved XD
+Lauren Reynolds thanks!
THANK YOU
lmaoooooooooo
...
xD
Thanks. My teacher is shit. You can teach me more in 3 hours than my teacher taught is this whole year.
Well done.
what did you get?
Lol
@@Love-st8hj lil bro aint finding out
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They say it's impossible to learn 15 poems at 9:37pm the night before the exam....
I think not....
Thank you Mr Bruff👊🏻
Matthew Davies what grade did u get
?
Zainab Ahmad I wanna know too hopefully it would give me hope lol
Matthew Davies we need to know!!
I can confirm that right now...
Regarding your question about the tying together of sibilance ("Sudden successive flights of bullets streak the silence") and alliteration in "Pale flakes with fingering stealth come feeling for our faces":
The sibilance of the 's' sound is a lot more harsh than the softer labiodental fricative 'f', which shows that while the bullets rush past suddenly and rapidly, the snowflakes' fall is gentle and evocatively beautiful but no less deadly.
6G English ye boiiiiiiiiiiii wut
+Clarity Johnston brilliant answer
Clarity Johnston I think I'll use this in my exam
Clarity Johnston 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻wish I could think like that
what do you mean.. please explain
Clarity Johnston I used what you said in my exam haha and the teachers loved it. Unfortunately, even though I talked about the literary device, I didn't completely say what it did and so get the full marks for it
Being forced to watch your videos for revision in my English class, I have really become to appreciate how much you've helped me! thank you!
+I'm not insane trust me thanks!
dude, i love Hollywood Undead.
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Same
I've got several interpretations of the sibilance, mention them all and you're guaranteed the alternative interpretation marks:
1. Complex method to use: Shows the free time they have on the front, portrays the futility of war as its simply who can outlast the other
2. S's are often onomatopoeic of shivering: References the idea of the weather being dangerous and the main danger of the front; they're dying from exposure.
3. May be onomatopoeic of the winds and bullets
4. S's don't necessarily need to be read softly. They can make harsh sounds to portray the frustration of Owens.
There's no reason why it can't be all of the above or other interpretations.
ily
ur a legend
top tip for anyone who is cramming like me, set the speed of the video to 1.5 so you can go through all the poems quickly.
im at x2, ive left this wayyyyy to late
@@eleanorknox2721 same here, gonna be a long night ahah
People doing your GCSE's tomorrow. Take control, you can do it!
Its fine dont have to do it cause of carona XD
@@boborb121 the comment was 2 years ago
@@boborb121 Ironic, we're in an English lesson and you flopped your speeling. What an iodit!
@@cyrusehambaram3195 so did u tho you spelt spelling wrong
@@cyrusehambaram3195 huh?
Although im cramming all these poems for next weeks exam, and hate the brutal impossible timings we have in the paper to do 3 essays and 1 analysation in 2hr 15 mins, I can say that Mr Bruff is bringing some joy to these analysations! At first I looked at them as boring expressionless texts that AQA threw in, but now that i've watched his videos, I feel empathy and emotion with each poet. Thankyou Mr Bruff.
thank you!
The paratactic language found in line 4 (Worried by silence, sentries whisper, curious, nervous) also accentuates the build up of tension- the soldiers are losing their cognitive ability and are omitting conjunctions due to their ‘aching’ brains
i love you so much this got me so many points in the exam🙏🙏🙏
I’m in year 10 now starting my GCSEs
Always hated English but now I have my amazing teacher and his videos to help me get through the English exams
Bruh I have a teacher with the exact same name as you
Imagine she is ur teacher since her comment was 5 years ago
clicked 'skip' nothing happened
lmao
I clicked skip “but nothing happens” 😂
deku
12:59
@@chickenbabyholt2639 hahahaha
Who's watching all the vids on poems the night before the exam??
Yeah lmao
shit best start revising
Tom Stagg meeeeee
Yeeeppppp
Yup
Mr Buff , Heagarty maths , Free science lessons = holy trinity of the night before an exam
Don't forget maths genie as well lol
any1 here in 2021, my siblings used to watch these and i started 2 yrs ago too. helps loads, mr bruff, im sure i once sent a message saying mr bruff knows his stuff, and u replied . it was few yrs ago, btw thank you sooo much for the help
For anyone who may be interested: 'silence, sentries, whisper, curious, nervous' the noticeable technique used is sibilance, which may be able to portray how much time was spent when thinking. The first two words 'silence, sentries may be interpreted to show that it was thought of quite fast as both words start with 's', creating that almost hissing sound, but as it carries on, it can be noticed that the next three words only contain that 's' sound within the word and not at the beginning, which may show how much free time and how much more thought was given as 'nothing happens'. Also, it may show each word's importance: 'silence' was the most important as the enemies could easily sneak up, it was worrying, but then it was 'sentries' which shows how human life was the 2nd most important thing on the list. Other inferences can be made regarding the other three words but that is the general idea.
Hegarty English
+WaverGaming ha!
You do hegarty maths aswell 😂 😂 😂
Hahahah
Free English Lessons
Yess
Our teacher genuinely set watching this video as our homework
Congratulations you've made it 😂
Morning of the exam gang... thanks for Saving my grade
Big up brudda bruff
Hope you did okay 😊
It's been two years... did you do well?
Just want to tell you what an amazing thing it is that you're doing. You're helping a lot of students who perhaps didn't have the best of teachers and were falling behind because of this. Thank you!
Thanks!
Ive missed months of year 11 because of my depression and these videos really help me catch up thank you
How did your exam go? ❤
I'd also say that the sibilance also reflects the "merciless winds that knife" the soldiers. The 's' sounds portray a vivid image of the wind and its attacking nature which has been criticised by Owen. The reader can sympathise with the shivering soldiers who believe they have nowhere to go, as even the nature's 'doors are closed', and in fact, nature uses its power in a rather assaultive manner.
@Harry Johnston whoa haha I wrote this 3 years ago, update: got a 9 so I was probably on the right lines! Good luck 😇
@@satwikasaran7757 omg congrats do you have any advice on how to get a 9??
for those who want to skip 13:00
FU
cheers ♥
Ur a god
🙏🏿 thankyou
Skip what?
Could the sibilance represent a ‘shhh’ sound representing how people didn’t want to hear the true horrors of war or is that too ambiguous?
Kitty good idea 👌🏻👊
'S' is almost a sinister sound (like you said), so when Owen is talking about the bullets streaking the silence, it may be a sinister hiss in the background that adds to the evilness(?) of war.
Bullets can also have a sort of hissing sound, and if they are hitting the snow, then that would probably make a hissing sound.
The 'f' in flakes kind of accentuates the idea of the flakes being stealthy (for me). 'F' is quite silent and can be put in a sentence without really knowing it's there, so I think the using of that letter is very good in there since it is stealthy by just being itself.
That's my analysis ^^
Using this for my English homework due tomorrow 😭😂
I was thinking the sibilance with the successive flights of bullets could represent the breathing patterns of the soldiers which reinforces the idea that they are nervous and continuously on edge, also the use of “the” could identify the intake of breath and tue slowing down of the hyperventilating soldiers
Class of 2019 where u at?
Dying slowly
revising desperately for our lives............. A.K.A- GCSE!!!!!!
here we are almost at the end of 2019!!
@@TenPandaBNM : )
7 months later, with lit paper 2 mock exam tomorrow :)
I got moved from set one to set three, and the teacher thinks we’re all dumb so doesn’t even analyse properly, so i’m having to come to your videos for a proper analysis! Thank you soo much!
Damn. Hope if all went well, even if your teacher was writing you off.
Thank u so much, in class I didn't understand AT ALL but now thanks to u I understand the poem much better
Great!
I was recommended this channel by my teacher and its certainly helped me! You've gained a subscriber :)
This English is LIT
in two ways!
bet you take it two ways
this puns needs to end.
JE SUIS SOUFFLE Actually no i agree, its no so punny anymore
Cause literature and shortened its lit! Yeh I don't think it's funny 😐
Thank you so much: I've been listening to a number of these in preparation for my exam tomorrow, and you've provided such strong alternative arguments and interpretations, it is fantastic. In regards to sibilance with biblical context, could you argue that the hissing sound relates to the sound of the snake, and the subtle persuasion of nature to the soldiers, weakening them and almost taking away their religion?
I honestly mean this. I cannot thank you enough for helping me. You have made my exams that little less stressful :)
No problem!
the sibilance emphasises the silence the soldiers face as they desperately wait for something to happen. It's very powerful as silence is obviously no noise but the poet makes the silence auditory
Thank you so much for posting this video, you have helped me hugely with my homework and my school work
u sir are a miracle and a hero. We also use ur videos in lessons to help us to make notes
+Princess Pink Shadow great! Thank you for that
Actually, we are the ones who should be thanking you for making this BRILLIANT video, not you thanking us for watching it 😍 You, sir, are saving our grades.🕺🏻 Subscribed✌🏻
Mr Bruff, you are amazing. Truly top bloke
You helped me analyse poetry at GCSE and now you've done it again for my A-levels. This is one of the poems my class has studied from the Wilfred Owen anthology for our 'WWI and its aftermath' paper, but Exposure has to be one of my favourites. Your analysis is and has always been fantastic. Thank you so much! :)
Brilliant - thank you!
Lucinda Larnach spoken like a true poet Luce
Sir, answering rhetorical questions in the poem is a technique called Hypophora. :)
Thanks for this. My teacher doesn't exactly go over the context. Well appreciated... 😁
+Nina Najib great!
hehe
XD
Just wanted to give my personal take on the line “dawn massing east her melancholy army”.
The noun “dawn” may link to ideas of happiness and warmth which may reflect the purpose of the soldiers fighting but also is presented to those oblivious to it’s harsh nature, criticising how it is seen as a positive, possibly divine, force.
Just my thoughts, please reply to let me know your views 🙂
Mohammed Adi Hussain this is good I would of never thought of this !
guys i keep on pressing skip....... "but nothing happens"
Homie is like a power up that you take the night before your exams
whose here because of quarantine
Windypenguin this man is gcse Jesus
me and phoebe
bruh im still here
Your videos were recommended to me by my cousin. They're absolutely great! Thank you!
This is they key to passing my english gcse! 😂 The analysis of the line "for love of God seems dying" was so deep, definetly the best poetry analysis ever
thanks!
Just so y'all know: "all their eyes are ice" can be interpreted as the soldiers having become desensitised to the brutality of of death, and how nature (and war to that end) has taken them over and left them numb and cold, both figuratively and literally.
I like that, thank you Sophie
I think the constant repetition of the word 'dying' in the refrains all throughout the poem reflect the fact that the soldiers are suffering a long, drawn-out death due to nature. Even when some soldiers do eventually die in the last verse, 'nothing happens' as a result - the soldiers' agonising deaths are shown to just be completely futile.
We should be shocked by the fact that some soldiers have actually died, but by this point everyone has become so numbed by the harsh weather conditions that some actual human deaths are just something else amongst the normal suffering the soldiers see everyday - in fact, it's like 'nothing' has even happened...
Wow, thank you! This video just helped me fill two A4 sides with everything. I've also done this with 'Ozymandias' and it really does help in lesson. Greatly appreciated. :)
Could you do an exam video where you go through the literature and language papers and talk about how you would answer each question
That’s so tragic, he died in the last month of WW1. Rest in peace.
well done. i am in year 7 and this is better than my older brother's gcse techer
Hi i just wanted to take this opportunity to thank you on how much you have taught me and helped me to improve my work.I really look forward to your future videos as always.I just finished watching your videos on the language ones.Thanks a lot.
+Areebah Faisal thank you! Comparison is covered in my literature playlist
Okay thanks.
Can the sibilance reflect the striving of the wind. Also, the fact that sibilance reminds of the hissing of a snake, the wind can be seen to be personified as a threat to the soldiers??
Fatima Fiaz yeah it can
This was actually quite awesome. Thanks :)
happy to help
im in year 11 and my grade for English literature is a 4.I been revising for days non stop but idk if it is helping me. At the end of the day im doing past papers but is like all my knowledge is forgotten from these videos
Tm is all gonna pay off
can someone help me on how owen has used personification and alliteration for the weather in the poem as I don't know how to answer this
again these videos are a life saver. 3 weeks to go!!
+Maddison Gibbs good
Thanks, you have helped me understand sibilance!
It was amazing and it DID help me a lot
thank you so much Mr bruff
I will use it in my essay
once again Thank you
U are AMAZING
Your explanations were excellent!!!
thx a lot
+praba siva great!
we all cooked then?
you already know 🙏😔
@@Abz2Bsylol
Unbelievably cooked
Yep😭😭😭
Bro I'm gonna get cooked, Fried and Baked at the same time
soooo helpful since i missed the lesson where we analysed this poem, THANK YOU
This helped me so much and hopefully betters my future, thank you MR BRUFF!
U sir have gained hav a suscriber
+ali farooq thank you
Hi +ali farooq
Maybe he'll improve your grammar. Haha is all jokes brother.
From a pineapple fanatic to a English fanatic, Thank you Mr Bruff! You are 100 times better than my actual teacher
+Pineapple Watcher thank you!
Pineapple Watcher How do you know he isn't wearing a silicon face mask and has a voice box implanted in his throat and that he is your teacher???? ¿¿¿¿
Thank you so much for this!! Extremely helpful especially during lockdown.
T minus 1.5 months till my Exam in Year 10 and you just saved me a lot of brainpower. Thanks
Me in that situation 2 years later
The sibilance could be interpreted as soldiers gathered around in small groups (linking to the amount of sibilance to the amount of soldiers ) and the ss sound created by sibilance could be the soldiers in the tension of the moment telling each other to hush as their tension builds furthermore adding to the fact the nothing happens, like in a game of hide and seek waiting to be caught the tension builds but then they walk past and nothing happens but the tension is still there and you tell each other to shh. Thank you by the way for this extremely helpful video.
last min exam on Thursday
Can u say that the use of sibilance suggests that the soldiers are paranoid of enemy attack, they are confused if it is the weather or the enemy attacking them. The hissing 's' might also suggest it is almost like a sanke waiting for its prey to leap
How does the sibilance suggest paranoia and confusion?
THANK YOU for uploading this! Just what I was looking for! :)
Thank you so much for making these videos, I have listened to this one and it has helped so much with my English work. Will definitely subscribe!! 👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
Just after I did my assessment ...
About the Keats thing, you could reference this poem to a loss of identity and could you maybe say the contrast between Keat feeling numb from the beauty of the nightingale and Owen being literally numb from the cold shows how he’s lost his sense of self and what he loved by almost mocking the poem?
Sibilance of the the letter ess implies shivers or the nerves of the war and is unexpected like the horrors of war and adds to the disoriented nature of life in the battlefield.
23:55 i know this is a super old video but i just wanted to point out that this section of the bible actually kind of means the opposite. Jesus is saying that even though people may hear of conflict and may feel that it is a sign that the end of the world is approaching, that this is not the case and that the "the end is not yet". this could highlight how the war feels like an endless purgatory for the soldiers, in which they are neither able to return home nor given the relief of death.
Hello sir, could you please mark this:
Man is often portrayed as being in conflict with nature. Explore the ways in which nature is portrayed as the enemy of man in 'Exposure' and one other poem from 'Power and Conflict'. [30 marks]
The poem 'Exposure' was a protest poem written by Wilfred Owen about his experiences in the trenches of WW1. Despite the traditional wartime dangers of guns and bombs, the biggest enemy of man is presented as nature, which is viewed as more powerful and threatening. 'The Prelude' is an epic poem describing the moment the poet's view of nature changed when he encountered a large mountain as a young boy and realised the danger it posed to humanity. In 'Exposure', the threat created by nature was mainly physical, where as in 'The Prelude', it was mostly psychological.
In 'Exposure', nature is first introduced as a threat in the first line- the 'merciless iced east winds' 'knive' the soldiers. This is a violent action, and as winds cannot have 'mercy', they are personified to reflect their cruetly and status as a direct enemy opposed to man rather than a neutral natural occurrence. First person plural pronouns such as 'Us' and 'our' to show that the impacts of the destructive power of nature are universal, and this creates a sense of comradeship among the soldiers. We could also assume that the enemy must be affected by such harsh weather conditions. Perhaps it would be better for everyone if the fighting ended. The opening phrase of the poem 'Our brains ache' is particularly significant - this was inspired by the start of a poem by John Keats 'My heart aches'. Keats was a Romantic poet, and this original line reflected how happy he was made by the beauty of nature. Owen read a lot of Keats' poetry during his early life, and he had initially believed that poems should focus on beauty, until after entering the trenches of WW1, he realised that poems must cover harsh and painful subjects, such as war. In contrast to the Romantic movement, which celebrates the beauty of nature, nature is seen as the common enemy of all of humanity in Exposure.
In 'The Prelude', nature is initially presented as a friend of humanity. This is symbolised by the opening line 'One summer morning (led by her) I found'. This creates a very vivid (as he remembers one particular morning) and almost romantic image of nature. At this point in his life, Wordsworth clearly viewed man as equal to nature, rather than as being in conflict with it. However, it is implied that he had known the truth about man's inferiority all along, and had been subconsciously supressing it. 'Led by her' is placed in brackets, as though as an afterthought. He was being led and controlled by a personified version of nature, reflecting its dominance. Unlike in 'Exposure', he believes in the façade of his own power and is 'Proud of his skill' of being able to row the boat straight. The poem is split into roughly three sections - the first, at which he is in love with nature, the second, where he becomes terrified of nature, and the third, where he reflects philosophically on his encounter with nature. The entire poem is one long stanza, initially reflecting his enchantment with the natural world, but soon coming to suggest he is emotionally overwhelmed and unable to comprehend what he has witnessed. There is significant enjambment throughout the first section as he paints beautiful, pastel images of the 'glittering' 'moon' and the 'sparkling light' reflecting off of the water.
Rather than enemy soldiers, the narrator believes the real threat is that which is posed by nature - the only force capable of causing man's extinction. In the fourth stanza 'Sudden successive flights of bullets streak the silence' uses sibilance. The soft sounds may suggest that the narrator is not afraid of enemy gunfire, and may even be welcoming death as an escape from the perpetual suffering and purposelessness of war. Malicious nature seems to kill more people in war than the enemy - cold air comes 'feeling for our faces' with 'fingering stealth'. This is deliberate, and the fricative alliteration emphasises the brutality and the relentlessness of such extreme weather conditions. The wind is seen as allied with the enemy as it 'Attacks' in 'shivering ranks of grey'. Grey was the colour of the German soldiers' uniforms. Dawn, which is supossed to symbolise light, hope and a new day, is not portrayed in the positive way it is in most poems (which directly rejects Romantic beliefs about nature) - it 'mass[es] in the east [its] melancholy army'. A fight against nature being hopeless due to the latter's immense power is again shown in the last stanza. The soldiers attempt to stay warm with a fire, but the flames burn like 'dark-red jewels'. Precious, but cold.
In 'The Prelude', nature's effect on the narrator is mainly psychological. His thoughts are left tourmented for days after encountering such 'huge and mighty' forms of nature. The young boy is profoundly affected and left in a state of 'darkness', either 'solitude / Or blank desertion'. He now understands the unsafe position of humanity in the world, and realises how weak it is in contrast to the hugeness of nature. He does not fully describe what he now thinks of nature, rather what he cannot. There are 'no pleasant images of trees', and 'no colours of green fields'. The technique of polysyndeton is used as 'no' is repeated to describe what there is not. This creates a picture of a terrifyingly powerful nature, incomprehensible to humans due to the weaknesses of our minds. The strength of nature is 'unknown' to humans. This poem serves as a warning to not underestimate the power of the natural world. When the poet was young, he made the mistake of thinking he could challenge nature and dominate it. It is likely that William Wordsworth wanted people to remember their place in the world and understand their limited levels of power.
In conclusion, both poems present fairly similar images of nature, both presenting nature as the greatest enemy of man rather than other humans. 'The Prelude' describes the poet's initial, romanticised views of nature, before he realised its sheer immensity. 'Exposure' presents nature as the ultimate killer of man in war - 'Shrivelling many hands' and causing people to freeze to death before 'bullets' can reach them. Nature is potrayed as a 'merciless' and 'mad' enemy, dangerous because it is not a human and has no control over itself.
Can you please analyse the poem tissue?
These videos have been incredibly helpful, thank you so much!
+shazia sarela good!
+SSBKK Vegito dude are you trolling or some shit😩
Thank you very much! My English teacher recommended your videos and they are incredibly helpful!
+Sarah Cat thanks
Your video really helped me to understand the poem since I didn't have any understanding of it before or its meaning. But I've found in your previous videos I've seen (I'm watching them in anthology order, not upload order) you clearly lay out the form and structure, but in this video there was no specific form section. I'm guessing some of the points you brought up were related to form, but which ones? Like does caesura come under form? The rhyme scheme? Etc.
Thanks
There was no specific form in this poem
i’m just worried about how i’m going to memorise all the quotes 😭😭
Mahima Begum Man up!
watching this the day my assignment draft is due, thank you for basically writing my entire essay
Tysm, I needed some extra annotations on this because I don't have much on my anthology. Thanks sir😄
Hey MrBuff these peom videos helped me out alot. I was wondering if you could add in a exam question and a written responce so that we can see what to include in the essay
What would u compare exposure to for nature and conflict ?
regarding sibilance: the words have an almost onomatopoeic effect, bringing to the audience the shivering and whispering in the trenches,
Grade 9 Analysis - The Best! :)
thankyou so much Mr bruff- this was so helpful and watching your videos has become a routine for me lol every night- I wonder which unseen poem will come up in this year's gcse exam- I have a feeling it'll be checking out me history because that's one of the hardest poems and they like to challenge us
now going to be doing gcse's and i am using your videos to revise
7 and a half hours before the exam good luck everyone haha :)
Free English Lessons, Corbett English and Hegarty English should be your channel name
the sibilance may be being used to represent the sounds of the wind. im not sure but thats what i think
we didn’t even start poems until after christmas of year 11 it’s now march and i don’t understand anything 🤦🏽♀️
I can't remember if I heard it, but a contextual thing is that war was seen as something brave and heroic people take part in, but the title of this poem is used very well by Wilfred Owen as it exposes the actuality of war and how they are waiting and being so worried, it presents some sort of monotonous tone, it's boring, just like the soldiers felt boredom whilst waiting maybe 3 hours + just waiting for something to happen.
can you make grade 9 analysis on Frankenstein, for example character analysis, theme analysis and structure/setting/genre analysis please
How would you even use the context of john keats in the exposure analysis? Could you use his reference or is this bit of context just something useful we could know?
can you talk about Owen's other poems and other poems such as Keats in the exam? I don't want to waste my time doing so if it won't be credited
No it won’t get marks
Hey to all the last minute crammers
Iona Impey hello, only 2 hours till the exam.....I still have time....right?
Totally...
Iona Impey my exam is in two days and I’m in year 9 it is bs
The Moon did u do good
I'm in year 9 and I'm not gonna do the exam until year 10