"Real life isn't DnD" is the saddest line of the whole video :D In all seriousness though, I have a hard time connecting with poetry, but with your insight it becomes a lot easier, thank you!
As a teacher myself, I am glad I was given the opportunity to express my appreciation for the fine work of a colleague, even by means of such a small token 🙏🏻
Thanks for the support. I'm working on another poem right now. Then back to art. I'm also considering to WH Auden's poem about a Breugel painting... Which would combine the two.
I have always had a more tragic interpretation of this poem, as I viewed the last stanza - with the punctuation marks fragmenting the text and thought flow - as an illustration of the speaker's psyche breaking down from the pain of loss. I saw the lighter tone of the first stanzas as ironic, or just as the speaker trying to deceive or protect herself from the painful truth. Your more positive view matches my own view of the redeeming power of art and structure. Thanks.
Phenomenal video! This is one of my favorite videos of yours and I've watched them all.
Thanks. I put more hours into this one than any previous video
That was beautiful, thank you for explaining all the nuances, I honestly wouldn't have picked most of those up.
Thank you so much for giving this poem a new life for me. Her resilience to lift herself up from disaster by the very structure of the poem itself.
Like always, soooo good! And a poem I not only connect with but cherish. Thanks for giving it the Earle rundown! I'm gonna watch it again!
Never heard it before. Its beautiful. Thank you
This was fantastic. So polished. So well done. Thanks!
Thanks Paul
pro tip : watch series at flixzone. Me and my gf have been using it for watching lots of of movies recently.
@Asher Francisco Definitely, been using Flixzone for since december myself =)
"Real life isn't DnD" is the saddest line of the whole video :D
In all seriousness though, I have a hard time connecting with poetry, but with your insight it becomes a lot easier, thank you!
Happy to hear that. Glad you have it a try
Thanks!
As a teacher myself, I am glad I was given the opportunity to express my appreciation for the fine work of a colleague, even by means of such a small token 🙏🏻
wouldn't mind if you do more poems =)
Oh. Definitely subscribe. The next video is a poem. Then back to art
Great video. Thanks for putting it together!
You're welcome
My favorite poem
This is one of my favorite poems and it touches me every time.
I hope I did it justice 😊
I always learn so much from your videos Earle - thank you. I will share this with my boys. It's beautiful.
Thanks Anita!
Feel free to mix up visual art with poems or whatever strikes your fancy since you're doing such a good job with it.
Thanks for the support. I'm working on another poem right now. Then back to art. I'm also considering to WH Auden's poem about a Breugel painting... Which would combine the two.
Thank you for sharing this poem. It was beautiful.
Happy you enjoyed it. Thank you for taking the time to comment
I have always had a more tragic interpretation of this poem, as I viewed the last stanza - with the punctuation marks fragmenting the text and thought flow - as an illustration of the speaker's psyche breaking down from the pain of loss. I saw the lighter tone of the first stanzas as ironic, or just as the speaker trying to deceive or protect herself from the painful truth.
Your more positive view matches my own view of the redeeming power of art and structure. Thanks.
Thank you for this video! One of my favorites poems.
Me too ☺️
Thank you for this beautiful video
Thank you for taking the time to say that. It's good to hear people enjoy it
amazing 😻
Wow, that was so good. I'm crying now :')
It's a great pandemic poem.... Thank you for taking the time to comment
This was a lovely video, thank you
😊😊😊
*Hello from Turkey.*
Hello from Italy!
👏🏾 👏🏾