A line-by-line analysis and overall summary of Sonnet 18 (Shall I Compare Thee To A Summer's Day?) 🕮 ☀️ In this video we will cover aspects of poem such as the structure, imagery, themes, diction and figurative language used. 📕🌷
I have my english literature exam tomorrow and this video is like most helpful video as before i found this poem very difficult,but the way of your teaching is fantastic.....thank you . LOVE FROM INDIA
I am not a student, just someone who loves poetry! Thank you for breaking this down in such a way that is easy to understand. This video really helped me to understand this poem and appreciate it on a deeper level.
This video is amazing , I am stidying the night before my exam and this poem was not even making sense to me untill i watched this video. Thank you so much😊
This has help me so much ❤️❤️❤️THANK YOU SO MUCH 😍😍😍your a life saver I probably would have failed if you didn't make this vedio and you explained so perfectly please make more vedios🙏✨❤️
3 года назад
I'm about to be writing an exam today and OMG THANK YOU SO MUCH THIS HELP SO MUCH!!!!
Thank you for going straight to the point. The whole video is informative and explained very well. I have my major English exam tomorrow and this made me clear about the poem. Thank you so much.
thanks so much you taught the analysis better than my literature teacher thanks a lot this helped me a lot ,i was unable to understand this poem now i can bye and i subscribed and liked
Thank you so much! 😄 I'm so glad I could help! Thanks for liking and subscribing, I really appreciate it! Let me know if there's any specific content I could make that would help you in the future.
Thank you very much mam, just awesome no time wasted only study and good quality question mam loved your effort,.... My request is to make a video on The Poetry of Earth By John keats
Hey there! That's a great question! 😊 The answer is a) - "Rough winds shake the darling buds of May" - the word rough implies that the winds are strong. Buds are parts of a plant that contain the flower petals before the flower blooms, so it's like a "shell" that covers a flower while it's growing. When the strong winds "shake" the buds, this means that the plant gets damaged by the strong winds and the flowers will not bloom. The month of May is in Spring (in the UK - where Shakespeare was when he wrote this poem). I hope this clears things up? Thanks for your question!