I wish this was taught like this when I was learning Shakespeare in school! My teacher only gave the briefest explanation and then moved on. Thank you so much for making this video!
This was fantastic! You explained it better than how they taught it in school and university. This is such a helpful resource for anyone learning about Shakespeare!
@@tristanandtheclassics6538 I did my undergraduate in English and I’m currently pursuing my masters in the same. I’m enrolled in poetry course where we write poems each week on different topics and I wanted to write the sonnet but just couldn’t figure out the rhyme-scheme. We had to write a political poem and I wanted to write about the war in Ukraine and use Pushkin as my inspiration. Ultimately ended up doing something totally different but this is such a timely video because I can still use these lessons in future writings. I really can’t thank you enough and I’ve shared this with my class. I hope you get so many more eyes on your videos which are so thoughtful and educational. Sending lots of love🤗❤️
@@ShivangiBhasin Pushkin is a great model for basing ones poetry on. I hope to expand my poetry reading this year. Thank you for your encouragement once again, Shivangi. And thank you so much for sharing my video with your class.❤
This was great! Question: do people ever disagree with the idea that he wrote this way and that we aren’t retroactively deciding things are stressed or unstressed? Also, do you think he write with this in mind or was it instinctual?
At the beginning of your video I had no clue as to what Iambic Pentameter was. In fact I had never heard of it. But after your brilliant explanation, I understand completely. Your detailed video is brilliant. Thank you so much for that.
Oh, thank you Pauline, that means a lot. Pleased you enjoyed it. Shakespeare is quite something and a deeper appreciation for why and how he does things just makes his works even more enjoyable.
Unless you are Australian, in which case it goes up at the end, everything is a query. Sun of York? Relax Aussies, I love you very much. Thank you, a very fine lesson. Iambic pentameter transcends dialect, that must be why Shakespeare is transcendent.
😂 So true about the Australian inflection. As for Shakespeare's transcendence, the chap was a genius. He was almost a channel which the rhythm of words flowed into the world.
I think reading Shakespeare is a mistake without having previously watched a play or heard a finely acted audio book of it. I personally do read alongs as the actors (be it visually or audio) will help us understand what is being said and what is happening as of course the language used is not easy to decipher as modern audience a lot of the time. Of course in reference to this lesson you are giving us the fine actors will lay the stresses out as intended. Your channel is superb thank you. Hello from Gibraltar
SIR YOU ABSOLUTELY BLEW MY MIND WITH THE TEE TUM EXERCISE BECAUSE I NEVER THOUGHT THE IAMBIC PENTAMETER LIKE THAT THANK YOU. YOU ARE A PHENOMENAL TEACHER.
Sir i am from Pakistan thankful to you for such an unusual contribution in literature understanding.God knows best you are great .I live in village here we don't have sources to owe economic contribution to you a legend .But in future days i wanna go to a metropolitan ,to prepare myself for Pakistan bureaucracy exams there such facility will be available to support and joining you in a proper give and take phenomenon.But now i would request the learning community to let real concept teachers work in their field and our economic subscription would be helful to the real teachers.in our country even fake educationists demand a lot of charges.I hope our supports would not go in vain.
I made it through all four years of high school literature and got out. Not understanding. I am back pentameter this video. Help me understand why it is and why it’s used. Thank you to the creators for putting this video out. It’s helped me a great deal. Appreciate Shakespeare’s work the soul of wit.…😊
This has been the best explanation of Iambic Pentametar that I've ever heard. I really enjoy your videos - you actually talk because you have something to say rather than just enjoying the sound of your own voice, like some other book tubers. Thank you!
Let me, for illustration purposes, as Shakespeare's pupil pose, and write some words in grand iambic feet, just five per line, to see how rhythm builds and resonates in those who felt my presence in the void, by which I mean this barren comment section.
Brilliant! Im currently sleep deprived with a 5 month old and this video kept me completely hooked, which is saying something as my attention span has dwindled somewhat 🙃 thank you so much!
I had an English teacher that, when he taught poetry, he always started with the rhythm, then the sentence structure or grammar, and only lastly attempted to decipher the meaning of the words. By that time I had zoned out & didn’t care any more about the poem, if I ever had, lol. He uncovered some really clever writing that way, but pretty much turned me off poetry for life!
Wow, that was a delightful and genius lesson. 👏🏼 Omg, I just went down the rabbit hole, and I am full of reminiscence of my old school days when we studied metrics in my mother tongue, Hungarian. And I've forgotten about it almost everything, but it is so great to remember and relearn it again. And in English, with Shakespeare. 😊 This video is a gem. 💎 Thank you.🤎
You explained this so clearly (and eloquently!) that I will play this for my homeschooled sixth grader. Thank you! You are a great teacher, and this was a labor of love to explain it in such a manner.
I've seen a discussion about Shakespeares work on television by Peter OToole and Orson Welles who both said that the iambic pentameter must rule your whole performance. It's much easier to understand what they meant if you understand how iambic pentameter affects the way you speak the lines. Thank you so much Tristan.
This was so wonderfully helpful. I've watched five or so other videos on iambic pentameter and yours was the best by far! Better than at school as well. Thank you!
Wow! Thank you so very much for your enthusiasm and clarity! You have so much joy in your teaching. You are a gem for making this video. I look forward to watching more.
i studied this for german literature in school (& then for ancient greek and latin poetry) 🥰 most people dont miss their school days but i feel like i never again had such wonderful topics to explore right under my nose 😅 this is a wonderfully easy explanation
Sometimes, one thinks that one should be introduced to school later in life, when one really appreciates it. 😅 I think there should be a return to school when we are 30. It would improve society immensely.
Shakespeare 500 years later Incredible Homer 2700 years later The Prophet Isaiah well over 2,000 years The Ramayana over 2,000 years Mind-blown Thank you so much!
This is the most entertaining and informative lecture on language I have ever heard. Thank you for the tremendous amount of work and study you put in to present this to us.
This video was extremely helpful and interesting. I remember my teacher in high school trying to teach us Italian students iambic pentameter to no avail. Now, thirty years later, it is clear at last 😅
Yes ignorant to this information , often times while reading Shakespeare i get in this ebb and flow which, beknowst to me is authentic prose or poetry ... wow I love Shakespeare.... the rereadablelity is unmatched with him..
Seriously, this is the best video I've seen on the topic. Like many others, I've struggled a bit with coming to grips with iambic pentameter and really understanding the subtleties and intricacies of it, but this has given me a totally different perspective on it. This should be used in classrooms - it's that good. I'm rapt to have discovered this channel and will be more than simply "looking into it"....and furthermore, i don't care who knows it!
That was the best explanation of iambic pentameter I've ever heard, thank you Tristan. Thirty minutes well spent. Now, where did I put my complete Shakespeare.
Are you a teacher by profession? You would be a wonderful one. I always feel like I learn something while watching your videos, no matter the topic. Thank you for this one!
I'm not a teacher, Courtney, although I would've liked to be one. I have suffered a good deal of poor health which isn't good for a permanent teaching position. Though I have had the privilege of helping various students who have come to me for informal discussions. It's just a pleasure to be able to share my love of literature with people like you Courtney, who have a mutual passion and appreciation. Thanks so much for being so supportive. You're great. 👍❤
Howdy. Musician and journalism major just now getting into reading the classics. This channel is amazing! Didn’t come from a great public school, so this has changed my life, especially my songwriting and writing career. 🤘🏻 thank you! I am particularly surprised by how iambic pentameter makes sense to me as an adult and having been a musician. But the way you explain it helped so much.
This has to be one of the finest teaching videos I have ever seen! And the first minute or so Was mind-blowingly beautiful! Better than any cute cat video! Thank you so much!
The famous opening lines are spoken by Duke Orsino: **"If music be the food of love, play on, Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting, The appetite may sicken, and so die."** At first glance, it might seem that Orsino is requesting music to indulge and enjoy his feelings of love. However, a closer reading reveals a more complex and nuanced intention. Orsino seeks an overindulgence in music, hoping that by flooding himself with the stimulus associated with love, he will reach a point of satiety where his desire will "sicken" and eventually "die." This suggests a desire to cure himself of his obsessive infatuation with Olivia by overexposing himself to the very thing that fuels it.
Wonderful video - that I finally got around to watching, because I, too, thought I knew what Iambic Pentameter was, but I didn't even know what I didn't know...what even there was to know. This will help me in my work to write with more authority (I'm often writing things from an expert's point of view and need to convey competence and leadership). Please do other writing "tricks" to convey other "hidden" messages. It's like learning how a magic trick works! Here's a clickbait title for you to use: "5 secret writing tricks to get them feeling the way you want - Guaranteed!" ^_^
Thank you (The rhythm of the heart, interesting). The rhythm of CPR, as I was taught, was to the song of the Bee Gee's "Staying Alive"...(or, more darkly as told to me by an EMT, "Another one bites the dust" by Queen). Which now makes me wonder if those songs lyrics are in Iambic pentameter.
Can you jump in your time machine and explain this to me in 1974. In school the only sense that I could make out of Shakespeare and having to write poetry was that the teacher got his jollies from torturing students. Do I need to learn Shakespeare's English to read Shakespeare? I speak Canadian, and I don't always pronounce words the same way you do.
The famous opening lines are spoken by Duke Orsino: **"If music be the food of love, play on, Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting, The appetite may sicken, and so die."** At first glance, it might seem that Orsino is requesting music to indulge and enjoy his feelings of love. However, a closer reading reveals a more complex and nuanced intention.
I enjoyed this informative video immensely. This is wonderful timing as my students will begin studying The Tragedy of Macbeth next week. Thank you so much, and I look forward to learning more about literature from you!
This is great. As a frequent traveller to Greece I wonder if some of the stresses are influenced by Greek, which although 'western' reverses the stress.
Of all the men on UA-cam you teach best, I can recite the work of Shakespeare now :D But great video. I got really excited learning how it echoes the beat of the heart.
A very well presented video. Thank you. I tried to read Thoreau’s ‘Walden” several times. But after I put in a kind of rhythm, I could read it. I knew that he translated the Iliad and the Odyssey in his spare time. Could you please tell me what rhythm he wrote Walden in, if any? Thank you.
Thanks for this Tristan! I’ve been spending the last year or so delving deeper into poetic structure and forms, and I wish I had this video when I started. Learning the structure of iambic pentameter came easy enough, but initially I had a bit of trouble finding it “out in the wild” so to speak. When I’d hear a line that broke the pattern, I found myself second guessing whether what I was reading actually was in iambic pentameter (or any other meter, for that matter). The latter part of this video really helps me build a bit more confidence in that regard. Since you’re on the topic of Shakespearean verse, could you perhaps do a video on the Sonnet form? I’d love to hear your thoughts on it beyond its base structure(s).
Thanks! It would do so many people a big favour, if teachers at high school simply said: Although Shakespeare writes in iambic pentameter, that doesn't mean there aren't variations. That one sentence could help generations of students😂 Good idea for a video on the Sonnets. Thanks for the suggestion.
Hi Tristan, I’m glad to have found your channel! I’m not too familiar with Shakespeare’s work, but I just have a curiosity question: could Shakespeare have made his iambic pentameter rhyme or would that, in his day, be a sort of breaking with conventional rules of the time? Thanks for the work you’re doing, I’ll check out your channel soon… Cheers 💖!
I remember watching Marlon Brando and I couldn't help but laugh. Admittently, his method acting did not help ! Actors such as Guilgud, Olivier, Guinness, Jacobi were great Shakespearean actors, but I wish I could say the same for Sir Kenneth Branagh's film version of Hamlet. Maybe he concentrated more on direction , I cannot explain why the film left me cold....not forgetting Jack Lemon and Robin Williams ,they were embarrassing 😔 Anyway, thank you. My nephew learned more from this video than his teacher !🙂
I thought i knew what is the Iambic Pentameter, not really until I watched this video !!!
Thanks, Adyshih! I'm pleased you enjoyed it.😃👍
If all teachers had your passion, the world would be a better place. Thank you.
This is just brilliant. I've looked around UA-cam and NOTHING compares to this explanation of iambic pentameter. Outstanding!!!
Thank you so much!
I wish this was taught like this when I was learning Shakespeare in school! My teacher only gave the briefest explanation and then moved on. Thank you so much for making this video!
This was fantastic! You explained it better than how they taught it in school and university. This is such a helpful resource for anyone learning about Shakespeare!
Thank you so much, Sam. That's really kind of you to say. Thanks for taking the time to be so encouraging, I truly appreciate it.
I’m going to cry Tristan, you have no idea how long I’ve struggled to understand this concept you’ve explained so simply. Thank you, truly🥺
Oh Shivangi, that's made my day. That's the reason I make these videos. If they can help one person, I'm content.
This is the best comment I've had.😃❤
@@tristanandtheclassics6538 I did my undergraduate in English and I’m currently pursuing my masters in the same. I’m enrolled in poetry course where we write poems each week on different topics and I wanted to write the sonnet but just couldn’t figure out the rhyme-scheme. We had to write a political poem and I wanted to write about the war in Ukraine and use Pushkin as my inspiration. Ultimately ended up doing something totally different but this is such a timely video because I can still use these lessons in future writings. I really can’t thank you enough and I’ve shared this with my class. I hope you get so many more eyes on your videos which are so thoughtful and educational. Sending lots of love🤗❤️
@@ShivangiBhasin Pushkin is a great model for basing ones poetry on. I hope to expand my poetry reading this year.
Thank you for your encouragement once again, Shivangi. And thank you so much for sharing my video with your class.❤
You have a very special talent for teaching. I learn so much from your videos.
This was great! Question: do people ever disagree with the idea that he wrote this way and that we aren’t retroactively deciding things are stressed or unstressed? Also, do you think he write with this in mind or was it instinctual?
At the beginning of your video I had no clue as to what Iambic Pentameter was. In fact I had never heard of it. But after your brilliant explanation, I understand completely. Your detailed video is brilliant. Thank you so much for that.
Oh, thank you Pauline, that means a lot. Pleased you enjoyed it. Shakespeare is quite something and a deeper appreciation for why and how he does things just makes his works even more enjoyable.
The most illuminating vid I've seen
You taught this lesson 'xactly like a pro
I hope to use this meter more in speech
I see what you did there 👀👀
Unless you are Australian, in which case it goes up at the end, everything is a query. Sun of York? Relax Aussies, I love you very much. Thank you, a very fine lesson. Iambic pentameter transcends dialect, that must be why Shakespeare is transcendent.
😂 So true about the Australian inflection.
As for Shakespeare's transcendence, the chap was a genius. He was almost a channel which the rhythm of words flowed into the world.
I think reading Shakespeare is a mistake without having previously watched a play or heard a finely acted audio book of it. I personally do read alongs as the actors (be it visually or audio) will help us understand what is being said and what is happening as of course the language used is not easy to decipher as modern audience a lot of the time. Of course in reference to this lesson you are giving us the fine actors will lay the stresses out as intended. Your channel is superb thank you. Hello from Gibraltar
SIR YOU ABSOLUTELY BLEW MY MIND WITH THE TEE TUM EXERCISE BECAUSE I NEVER THOUGHT THE IAMBIC PENTAMETER LIKE THAT THANK YOU. YOU ARE A PHENOMENAL TEACHER.
I apologize for the caps lock but you very much made me see the beauty of English literature!
Actually found this more useful then what I learned in two years at drama School.
Sir i am from Pakistan thankful to you for such an unusual contribution in literature understanding.God knows best you are great .I live in village here we don't have sources to owe economic contribution to you a legend .But in future days i wanna go to a metropolitan ,to prepare myself for Pakistan bureaucracy exams there such facility will be available to support and joining you in a proper give and take phenomenon.But now i would request the learning community to let real concept teachers work in their field and our economic subscription would be helful to the real teachers.in our country even fake educationists demand a lot of charges.I hope our supports would not go in vain.
I made it through all four years of high school literature and got out. Not understanding. I am back pentameter this video. Help me understand why it is and why it’s used. Thank you to the creators for putting this video out. It’s helped me a great deal. Appreciate Shakespeare’s work the soul of wit.…😊
Thanks, Christopher. I'm pleased that you liked it. 👍
You are an amazing teacher. This was so good - thanks!
Awww thanks, that's really nice of you to say. Iambic pentameter is fascinating isn't it?
This has been the best explanation of Iambic Pentametar that I've ever heard. I really enjoy your videos - you actually talk because you have something to say rather than just enjoying the sound of your own voice, like some other book tubers.
Thank you!
Let me, for illustration purposes,
as Shakespeare's pupil pose, and write some words
in grand iambic feet, just five per line,
to see how rhythm builds and resonates
in those who felt my presence in the void,
by which I mean this barren comment section.
👏👏👏👏👏
Brilliant! Im currently sleep deprived with a 5 month old and this video kept me completely hooked, which is saying something as my attention span has dwindled somewhat 🙃 thank you so much!
I had an English teacher that, when he taught poetry, he always started with the rhythm, then the sentence structure or grammar, and only lastly attempted to decipher the meaning of the words. By that time I had zoned out & didn’t care any more about the poem, if I ever had, lol. He uncovered some really clever writing that way, but pretty much turned me off poetry for life!
Wow, that was a delightful and genius lesson. 👏🏼 Omg, I just went down the rabbit hole, and I am full of reminiscence of my old school days when we studied metrics in my mother tongue, Hungarian. And I've forgotten about it almost everything, but it is so great to remember and relearn it again. And in English, with Shakespeare. 😊 This video is a gem. 💎 Thank you.🤎
You explained this so clearly (and eloquently!) that I will play this for my homeschooled sixth grader. Thank you! You are a great teacher, and this was a labor of love to explain it in such a manner.
I've seen a discussion about Shakespeares work on television by Peter OToole and Orson Welles who both said that the iambic pentameter must rule your whole performance. It's much easier to understand what they meant if you understand how iambic pentameter affects the way you speak the lines. Thank you so much Tristan.
This was so wonderfully helpful. I've watched five or so other videos on iambic pentameter and yours was the best by far! Better than at school as well. Thank you!
I'm so glad that you found it helpful ☺️
Wow! Thank you so very much for your enthusiasm and clarity! You have so much joy in your teaching. You are a gem for making this video. I look forward to watching more.
Thank you so much!😀❤️
This is so well explained. You have really opened my eyes even more to the genius of Shakespeare. I always enjoy your videos, new and old. Thank you!
I thought I knew about iambic pentameter, but after watching this, I truly know it. Thank you
Best 30 mins spent on YT.
Thank you. That is so kind of you to say.😀❤️
A fantastic explanation! Thank you so much for this. You bring Shakespeare to life in a wonderful way.
Tristan, you are a treasure. I am in the "middle" of Middlemarch, and your videos have helped me to appreciate this magnificent book even more.
This makes me more interested in reading Shakespeare further. I only understood it in school when it was explained thoroughly.
I found this very helpful. A rather scientific approach
i studied this for german literature in school (& then for ancient greek and latin poetry) 🥰 most people dont miss their school days but i feel like i never again had such wonderful topics to explore right under my nose 😅 this is a wonderfully easy explanation
Sometimes, one thinks that one should be introduced to school later in life, when one really appreciates it. 😅 I think there should be a return to school when we are 30. It would improve society immensely.
Shakespeare 500 years later
Incredible
Homer 2700 years later
The Prophet Isaiah well over 2,000 years
The Ramayana over 2,000 years
Mind-blown
Thank you so much!
This is the most entertaining and informative lecture on language I have ever heard. Thank you for the tremendous amount of work and study you put in to present this to us.
Thank you, Harriet. I'm so glad that you liked it.😃❤️
This video was extremely helpful and interesting. I remember my teacher in high school trying to teach us Italian students iambic pentameter to no avail. Now, thirty years later, it is clear at last 😅
This thirty minutes has given me so much Thank you
Yes ignorant to this information , often times while reading Shakespeare i get in this ebb and flow which, beknowst to me is authentic prose or poetry ... wow I love Shakespeare.... the rereadablelity is unmatched with him..
Seriously, this is the best video I've seen on the topic.
Like many others, I've struggled a bit with coming to grips with iambic pentameter and really understanding the subtleties and intricacies of it, but this has given me a totally different perspective on it. This should be used in classrooms - it's that good.
I'm rapt to have discovered this channel and will be more than simply "looking into it"....and furthermore, i don't care who knows it!
Love all your videos, but these educational ones really make my day! Thank you!
That was the best explanation of iambic pentameter I've ever heard, thank you Tristan. Thirty minutes well spent. Now, where did I put my complete Shakespeare.
I listened to a few UA-cams on meter and this one was a delight to watch. Meter is clearly explained. Thank you
Thank you. That means a lot to me. 😀👍❤️
This was very informative! Explained so well! Thank you for the video
Thank you Chris. It amazes me how much there is to how language works.
Are you a teacher by profession? You would be a wonderful one. I always feel like I learn something while watching your videos, no matter the topic. Thank you for this one!
I'm not a teacher, Courtney, although I would've liked to be one.
I have suffered a good deal of poor health which isn't good for a permanent teaching position. Though I have had the privilege of helping various students who have come to me for informal discussions.
It's just a pleasure to be able to share my love of literature with people like you Courtney, who have a mutual passion and appreciation.
Thanks so much for being so supportive. You're great. 👍❤
Howdy. Musician and journalism major just now getting into reading the classics. This channel is amazing! Didn’t come from a great public school, so this has changed my life, especially my songwriting and writing career. 🤘🏻 thank you!
I am particularly surprised by how iambic pentameter makes sense to me as an adult and having been a musician. But the way you explain it helped so much.
wow thank you. the last part is the permission I needed to break iambic pentameter in a long poem I am writing!!!
This was a wonderful video. It made me want to read more Shakespeare.
Sir.it's a great video. I never understood it in my college time but your methods of teaching n your smiling face makes things easier.
Thank you so much, Saleem.
The rhythm of the heart! Brilliant!
In a 1 month HUM course and this was very helpful ! Thank you
This has to be one of the finest teaching videos I have ever seen!
And the first minute or so
Was mind-blowingly beautiful!
Better than any cute cat video!
Thank you so much!
The famous opening lines are spoken by Duke Orsino:
**"If music be the food of love, play on,
Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting,
The appetite may sicken, and so die."**
At first glance, it might seem that Orsino is requesting music to indulge and enjoy his feelings of love. However, a closer reading reveals a more complex and nuanced intention.
Orsino seeks an overindulgence in music, hoping that by flooding himself with the stimulus associated with love, he will reach a point of satiety where his desire will "sicken" and eventually "die." This suggests a desire to cure himself of his obsessive infatuation with Olivia by overexposing himself to the very thing that fuels it.
Wonderful video - that I finally got around to watching, because I, too, thought I knew what Iambic Pentameter was, but I didn't even know what I didn't know...what even there was to know. This will help me in my work to write with more authority (I'm often writing things from an expert's point of view and need to convey competence and leadership). Please do other writing "tricks" to convey other "hidden" messages. It's like learning how a magic trick works! Here's a clickbait title for you to use: "5 secret writing tricks to get them feeling the way you want - Guaranteed!" ^_^
Pleased you enjoyed it. And thank you for the video title. That's awesome!!!
Thank you for the great explanation of the iambic pentameter that it’s not easy to learn. A great teacher I am so glad to find today!
Thank you (The rhythm of the heart, interesting).
The rhythm of CPR, as I was taught, was to the song of the Bee Gee's "Staying Alive"...(or, more darkly as told to me by an EMT, "Another one bites the dust" by Queen).
Which now makes me wonder if those songs lyrics are in Iambic pentameter.
Very informative and your enthusiasm is infectious.
Wow! A fantastic video. This was helpful in every way. Thank you! 🎉
I'm so glad that you found it helpful ☺️
Can you jump in your time machine and explain this to me in 1974. In school the only sense that I could make out of Shakespeare and having to write poetry was that the teacher got his jollies from torturing students. Do I need to learn Shakespeare's English to read Shakespeare? I speak Canadian, and I don't always pronounce words the same way you do.
The famous opening lines are spoken by Duke Orsino:
**"If music be the food of love, play on,
Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting,
The appetite may sicken, and so die."**
At first glance, it might seem that Orsino is requesting music to indulge and enjoy his feelings of love. However, a closer reading reveals a more complex and nuanced intention.
I enjoyed this informative video immensely. This is wonderful timing as my students will begin studying The Tragedy of Macbeth next week. Thank you so much, and I look forward to learning more about literature from you!
A superb explanation of iambic pentameter. Thank you!😊
Thank you, Francesca 😀 I'm so glad you enjoyed it ☺️
I really love and appreciate your channel Tristan
I appreciate that!
Wow, what an unbelievably brilliant style of explanation, Tristan. Thank you so so much for this, it made so much sense to me 😁😍
God bless you. And may all your wishes and hearts desires manifest. Thank you for this lesson.
This is great. As a frequent traveller to Greece I wonder if some of the stresses are influenced by Greek, which although 'western' reverses the stress.
Of all the men on UA-cam you teach best,
I can recite the work of Shakespeare now
:D
But great video. I got really excited learning how it echoes the beat of the heart.
Brilliant! Thank you so much for this amazing class. ❤
Thank you, Amy. I'm so pleased that you enjoyed it. 😀❤️
Thank you for this amazing video!!! I studied this but found myself completely learning it anew! Why is our memory so fickle?!
Well done. Thanks, Tristan for all the good examples.😊I get it and love it and just emphasizes the genius of Shakespeare.
Thank you so much. Such an informative and great video. I loved how explained everything.
Awesome video. I"m going to try to write something in iambic pentameter. A sentence I never thought i would ever write lol.
brilliant explanation..... sharing with my students... thank you ...love and respect..💌
Thank you so much. I hope your students find it helpful.👍
This video is so good. It really shows you how romantic shakespeare actually was!!
Thank you for making this video. It's been really helpful to me.
Wonderful explanation. Thank you!
Oh! You are amazingly clear! Thanks!
What an amazing lesson!
this is seriously underated..thankyou sir
Thank you so much. I appreciate it 😃❤️
SO helpful! Thank you 😊
A very well presented video. Thank you. I tried to read Thoreau’s ‘Walden” several times. But after I put in a kind of rhythm, I could read it. I knew that he translated the Iliad and the Odyssey in his spare time. Could you please tell me what rhythm he wrote Walden in, if any? Thank you.
Absolutely brilliant, thank you 🙏
Thank you. I'm so pleased that you enjoyed it. 😃❤️
Another excellent piece
Thanks Stephen 😊
Thank you so much! Best explanation ever!!! 😊🎉❤
Great video! I can’t thank you enough.
I'm so pleased that you watched it. Thank you so much. 😀❤️👍
very usefull and interesting. Thank you!
excellent explanation, thank you
So glad you found it helpful. 😀
Loved this! THANK YOU SO MUCH
I love this. Very informative. My question is that since I’m American and speak with an American accent does that change the stressed and unstressed?
Thank you so much, Tristan.
this video was invaluable. thanks so much!
Really pleased that you found it so useful.
Life-changing lesson! now I know there is always 5 stress in a row, and you could play with the order and pause with the spare space.
Thanks for this Tristan! I’ve been spending the last year or so delving deeper into poetic structure and forms, and I wish I had this video when I started. Learning the structure of iambic pentameter came easy enough, but initially I had a bit of trouble finding it “out in the wild” so to speak. When I’d hear a line that broke the pattern, I found myself second guessing whether what I was reading actually was in iambic pentameter (or any other meter, for that matter). The latter part of this video really helps me build a bit more confidence in that regard.
Since you’re on the topic of Shakespearean verse, could you perhaps do a video on the Sonnet form? I’d love to hear your thoughts on it beyond its base structure(s).
Thanks! It would do so many people a big favour, if teachers at high school simply said: Although Shakespeare writes in iambic pentameter, that doesn't mean there aren't variations.
That one sentence could help generations of students😂
Good idea for a video on the Sonnets. Thanks for the suggestion.
Slow digestion stretches the attention-span like nature's forgotten magic.
Hi Tristan, I’m glad to have found your channel! I’m not too familiar with Shakespeare’s work, but I just have a curiosity question: could Shakespeare have made his iambic pentameter rhyme or would that, in his day, be a sort of breaking with conventional rules of the time?
Thanks for the work you’re doing, I’ll check out your channel soon… Cheers 💖!
I got it finally! You are an amazing teacher😅
This is such a helpful video ❤❤
I'm so pleased that you found it helpful 😀
As usual, i loved this video. I do enjoy the videos tremendously.
I remember watching Marlon Brando and I couldn't help but laugh. Admittently, his method acting did not help !
Actors such as Guilgud, Olivier, Guinness, Jacobi were great Shakespearean actors, but I wish I could say the same for Sir Kenneth Branagh's film version of Hamlet. Maybe he concentrated more on direction , I cannot explain why the film left me cold....not forgetting Jack Lemon and Robin Williams ,they were embarrassing 😔
Anyway, thank you. My nephew learned more from this video than his teacher !🙂
very clear, thanks!