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AP® English Literature and Composition Passage Drill 2, Problem 1. What claim does Bacon make that contradicts the maxim "Whatsoever is delig...
AP® English Literature and Composition Passage Drill 1, Problem 1. Which literary device is used in lines 31 to 37?
AP English Literature and Composition 1.4 Passage Drill 2. What literary device characterizes lines 18 through 23?
AP English Literature and Composition 1.3 Passage Drill 5 216 Views
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AP English Literature and Composition 1.3 Passage Drill 5. This form of address is most commonly referred to as a what?
Transcript
- 00:03
Here's your shmoop du jour, brought to you by Rest and Sleep. Two of our three favorite
- 00:08
things to do while lying down.
- 00:19
This form of address is most commonly referred to as a... what?
- 00:24
And here are the potential answers...
- 00:30
Okay, so this poem is clearly addressing... someone.
Full Transcript
- 00:33
It's not like the speaker is talking to himself. Although... with all this talk of Death, it's
- 00:37
likely he doesn't have many friends...
- 00:39
But this question wants to know what form of address this poem is written in.
- 00:42
So... it's mainly a vocab question. Let's see if we can narrow things down by eliminating
- 00:46
some of the decoys...
- 00:47
D is probably the easiest choice to cut, because dialogue implies that two or more people are conversing...
- 00:53
...and in this case, we only have one morbid gentleman communicating all by his lonesome.
- 00:58
Asides are uber-short statements, not 14-liners... and they are reserved more for plays than for poems...
- 01:03
...so it's not an aside either.
- 01:05
It can't be an apostrophe, because that's a punctuation mark, not a...
- 01:08
...hold on a second.
- 01:10
What if -- bear with us for a sec here -- the word "apostrophe" has a... second meaning?
- 01:16
In fact... it does. Which is a fact you would only know if you had studied your poetry terminology.
- 01:20
So... hopefully you have.
- 01:22
In poetry, "apostrophe" can also refer to lines that are being delivered to an abstract
- 01:26
thing, rather than to an actual person or living audience.
- 01:29
Which... is precisely what we have here.
- 01:32
The author is speaking to Death -- probably because he's such a good listener.
- 01:35
It's not a soliloquy, because it's not a long speech directed at the audience...
- 01:40
...and monologue doesn't work, because it's not a speech delivered in a play to another character.
- 01:44
So yeah -- believe it or not, B -- apostrophe -- is the correct answer.
- 01:48
Tell all your friends...
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