- The Rime of the Ancient Mariner - William Blake: The Tyger The Schoolboy
Please make sure you have your Alquin, a notebook and a pen on your table.
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Slide 1: Slide
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This lesson contains 12 slides, with text slides.
Lesson duration is: 50 min
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V5 English
Today:
- The Rime of the Ancient Mariner - William Blake: The Tyger The Schoolboy
Please make sure you have your Alquin, a notebook and a pen on your table.
Slide 1 - Slide
The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner 2/2
by
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Make sure you have your Alquin and a notebook on your table and a pen in your hand.
Slide 2 - Slide
Part 3
- Ghost-ship appears
- On board: Death and a beautiful woman called Life-in-Death
- Casting dice to decide upon the fate of the ship
- Life-in-Death: mariner
- Death: the rest of the crew
Slide 3 - Slide
Part 4
- Mariner accepts he's cursed
- Tried to pray, but wasn't possible until he accepted God's creatures/creations
- He gets back to England led by the crew possessed by spirits
Slide 4 - Slide
Part 5
- Everything changes "for the better": Mariner is saved and is forgiven by a holy man.
- Mariner has to tell the story over and over again (his penance).
- God has made/created us all, so respect nature and all of creation.
Slide 5 - Slide
William Blake
1757-1827
Did not go to school at first, roamed around London.
Artistic talent
1782: married Catherine Boucher (illiterate), no children
Used new graphical techniques: copper engraving.
Slide 6 - Slide
William Blake
First major collection: Songs of Innocence, 1789. Collection of short poems influenced by nursery rhymes, ballads and hymns.
About growing up in a secure setting.
Second collection: Songs of Experience.
Effect of the city, social/religious oppression on children.
Slide 7 - Slide
William Blake - The Tyger
Songs of Experience
Tiger as a symbol of the magnitude and power of God's creation: magnificent, majestic and full of beauty, but also frightening because of its deadly violence.
Message: How could it be that the one and the same God created both the innocent and vulnerable lamb and the frighteningly powerful tiger.
Slide 8 - Slide
William Blake - The Tyger
Songs of Experience
Tiger as a symbol of the magnitude and power of God's creation: magnificent, majestic and full of beauty, but also frightening because of its deadly violence.
Message: How could it be that the one and the same God created both the innocent and vulnerable lamb and the frighteningly powerful tiger.
Slide 9 - Slide
Homework Wednesday
Answer the questions on - the Ancient Mariner (p. 25), only questions 8-13 and the questions on - The Tyger (p. 51)
and hand in your answers on itslearning (don't forget!). You can skip the additional assignments.
Slide 10 - Slide
William Blake - The Schoolboy
During Blake's time, schools were usually housed in old, dark and forbidding buildings.
Few teachers were properly trained.
Schoolmasters were typically retired soldiers, looking to supplement their meagre army pensions.
Children were drilled to be obedient and if they weren't, the response was corporal punishment.
Slide 11 - Slide
William Blake - The Schoolboy
Blake was heavily influenced by French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Émile ou de l'Éducation (1762): we should not learn in school, but in/from nature.
The Schoolboy: the schoolboy bemoans his situation. Books and lessons isolate him from nature and thus prevent him from enjoying life.