Correzioni

Testo da SophiaD - English

  • Poetry in Dead Poets Society

  • As can be expected, “Dead Poets Society” gives the poetry an important role.
  • Several poets are quoted or discussed.
  • For example, Robert Frost's “The Road Not Taken”, or Robert Herrick's “To The Virgins” are approached.
  • However, Walt Whitman's “O Captain!
  • My Captain!” and Henry D.
  • Thoreau's “Walden” are certainly the most important poems of the film. “O Captain!
  • My Captain” is important because that's how students have to call Keating, when they feel daring and because we can liken the poem and the movie.
  • A few of “Walden”'s sentence were read at the beginning of every Dead Poets Society meeting, but this poem is actually what the movie is about: 'sucking the marrow out of life', 'seizing the day', 'carpe diem'.
  • Despite all this, we can notice that even though Keating, who is an English literature teacher, never, in the movie, analyzed, or criticized or even studied a poem.
  • He just commented a sentence.
  • This non-analysis might have led his students to misinterpret some of his “lessons”.
  • For example, with “The Road Not Taken”, he only says : “Robert Frost said, ‘Two roads diverged in a wood and I / I took the one less traveled by / And that has made all the difference.’”.
  • What he forgot to say is that, in the rest of the poem, Frost's character is mocking his choice, something we can not know without the context.

PER FAVORE, AIUTA A CORREGGERE OGNI FRASE! - English