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M.E.BAD- The '100' Game [Part II]
from YouTube :: Tag // incubus April 13, 2008
PART II! Same special thanks as Pt. I. MEBAD & THS Camera Men/Women- Me [Vivian Dien] & Martin Hoang [Got the footwork, lol] Songs- Dig - Incubus All the things that I've done - The Killers OH NO!! -reviewed the video and there's about 30 seconds worth of film that got blacked out, I'm sorry, but you'll have to listen to music and the music for a while until Sherwin's game continues, I have no clue why that happened, and I'm sorry, but you'll have to deal with it :( GRR! Author: TrystProductions Keywords: badminton hayward california mount eden high school mt. 2008 tennyson home game 100 straight win undefeated Added: April 13, 2008
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Alfred Lord Tennyson "The Gypsy's Warning" Poem Animation
from Dailymotion - musique video group March 26, 2008
Heres a virtual movie of Alfred Lord Tennyson reading his celebrated poem The Gypsy's Warning . The poem is read by poet songster and author Dave Russel. Kind Regards Jim Clark All rights are reserved on this video sound recording copyright Jim Clark 2008Author: Poetrylad Tags: Alfred Lord Tennyson The Gypsy's Warning Poem Animation poet poetry light brigade ernest dowson mackworth dolben rossetti Posted: 26 March 2008 Rating: 5.0 Votes: 1
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Walt Whitman "America" Poem Animation Wax cylinder recording
from Dailymotion - bonne musique group March 14, 2008
Heres a virtual movie using this 36-second wax cylinder 1890 recording of what is thought to be Walt Whitman's voice reading four lines from his poem America . Kind Regards Jim Clark All rights are reserved on this video sound recording copyright Jim Clark 2008 Author: Poetrylad Tags: Walt Whitman America Poem Animation Wax cylinder recording tennyson kipling ts eliot dylan thomas Posted: 14 March 2008 Rating: 0.0 Votes: 0
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Dylan Thomas "Death Shall Have No dominion" Poem Animation
from Dailymotion - bonne musique group March 08, 2008
Heres is a virtual movie of the great Welsh poet Dylan Thomas reading his poem Death Shall Have No Dominion . Kind Regards Jim Clark All rights are reserved on this video recording copyright Jim Clark 2008Author: Poetrylad Tags: Dylan Thomas Death Shall Have No dominion Poem Animation ts eliot thomas wyatt christina rossetti kipling yeats tennyson patmore ernest dowson poet poetry wilfred owen lewis caroll Posted: 08 March 2008 Rating: 0.0 Votes: 0
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Christina Rossetti "Five Poems set to music" Victorian poems
from Dailymotion - Music Vids group March 06, 2008
Heres five wonderful Christina Rossetti poems set to music. She is the greatest ever female poet in my opinion a lady who could conjure mysticism from words like no other before or after her. Kind Regards Jim Clark All rights are reserved on this video sound recording copyright Jim Cark 2007Author: Poetrylad Tags: Christina Rossetti Victorian poems poet poetry recital uphill echo remember ernest dowson kipling tennyson yeats mackworth dolben plarr beddoes patmore keats Posted: 06 March 2008 Rating: 0.0 Votes: 0
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Alfred Lord Tennyson "The charge of the light brigade"
from Dailymotion - bonne musique group March 05, 2008
Heres a virtual movie of Queen Victoria's favourite poet Alfred Lord Tennyson 1809 - 1892 reading his well known poem The Charge of the Light Brigade this one is called The charge of the light brigade The sound recording was made by one of Thomas Edisons recording agents in the 1890's. Kind Regards Jim Clark All rights are reserved on this video recording copyright Jim Clark 2008 Author: Poetrylad Tags: Alfred Lord Tennyson The charge of the light brigade poem poetry animation kipling dylan thomas ts eliot ernest dowson rossetti keats Posted: 05 March 2008 Rating: 0.0 Votes: 0
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Ring Out, Wild Bells
from Poem of The Day December 31, 2007
"Ring Out, Wild Bells" from In Memoriam by Alfred Lord Tennyson "Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky, The flying cloud, the frosty light: The year is dying in the night; Ring out, wild bells, and let him die"
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The Windhover
from Gardner Writes November 13, 2007
Photo from A Different Voice, a thoughtful blog I discovered while searching for this image. Here s a poem I ve treasured for thirty years. I remember vividly my first encounter with Hopkins, at the end of a Victorian Poetry class with Dillon Johnston at Wake Forest University. We d gone through Tennyson, Browning, and Arnold Arnold who left poetry for the world of literary criticism, alas and at the end of the term Dr. Johnston had brought us to the most radical and experimental poet of them all: Gerard Manley Hopkins. Hopkins ideas of instress the vital, emphatic force that holds and moves all creation from within and inscape the irreducible uniqueness, the thisness of each created being were deeply inspiring to a young man in whom a passion for poetry, some might say a passion for passion itself, was coming into its first full flowering. Dr. Johnston seemed to me to have a very deep, if somewhat guarded connection with Hopkins intensity. His explications of these poems were very influential for me. I subsequently did my M.A. thesis on Hopkins and music. Hopkins poems can be difficult to understand. His own friends, one of them a future poet laureate of England, found them difficult. Hopkins did his best to clarify these works without watering them down. And now, 150 years later, we re attuned to certain kinds of poetic experimentation that the late Victorians were not. Still, it may take two or three readings or listenings to begin to get what he s saying. The rush of words and stresses in Hopkins poetry performs a specific mimetic function. Hopkins is not being difficult just for the sake of being difficult or precious. He s trying hard, as all great poets do, to transcribe and enact the parts of experience that seem especially meaningful, where the rich implications of any event reveal not only the human activity of meaning-making but the essential meaningfulness of being itself. Some notes about the poem may be helpful. Hopkins added the tag To Christ Our Lord to make it clear that the Windhover is a symbol or allegory for Christ. Whatever one s own beliefs, the urgent particularity of Hopkins observations here have a special beauty and power, I think. Also, in my commentary following the poem, I neglected to define chevalier. A chevalier is a knight. My recitation is in response to a request from Chris Gill, Chief Information Officer at Gonzaga University. Chris was one of my classmates at the 2005 Frye Leadership Institute. I m over two years late responding to Chris s kind request, but reconnecting with him at EDUCAUSE 2007 reminded me that I owed this colleague and friend a small token of my thanks for his support and encouragement over these years, years that have brought changes and challenges to both of us. So here you go, Chris. I hope you enjoy the results.
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