Lesson 1 Recognizing Roles in Life PDF
Lesson 1 Recognizing Roles in Life PDF
Department of Education
Region VII, Central Visayas
Division of Bohol
Reading a poem paves the way to making meaning in life. It allows you to share certain experiences.
Oftentimes, you find you share something in common to that experience that makes the poem
meaningful. This is when you think back and recall a time when you have much in common with the
same experience than what you originally thought. The poem speaks to you as you explore human
condition.
Background of the Literature: In Act 2 Scene 7 of William Shakespeare’s comedy book As You Like
It, Jaques speaks his ‘Ages of a Man’ monologue (better known by most as the ‘All the world’s a stage
speech’). In this monologue Jaques describes in some detail these seven stages of life that men go
through.
THE SEVEN AGES OF MAN
(from: “AS YOU LIKE IT” ) by: William Shakespeare
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Key Notes:
Blank Verse: Any poetry that does have a set metrical pattern (usually iambic pentameter),
but does not have rhyme, is blank verse. Shakespeare frequently used unrhymed iambic pentameter
in his plays; his works are an early example of blank verse.
Free Verse: Most modern poetry no longer follows strict rules of meter or rhyme, especially
throughout an entire poem. Free verse, frankly, has no rules about meter or rhyme whatsoever!
[In other words, blank verse has rhythm, but no rhyme, while free verse
has neither rhythm nor rhyme.]
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Task 3: On Punctuation and Capitalization
When you read poems, you don’t pause or stop at the end of the lines, but you watch out for comma
or period to guide them. Use punctuation marks to help you find sensible meaning of what you’re
reading. Clarity of expressions in poetry or prose composition exists if the sentences are appropriately
punctuated and the words are properly capitalized.
Rewrite the informative article below with correct punctuation and capitalization. You can omit,
add and/or use period (.), comma (,), hyphen (-) and other necessary punctuation marks to find
sensible meaning of the article.
EARLYGREEKSHAD HARDLYANYPUNCTUATION
FONOITCERIDEHTDEGNAHCNEVEDNA*
THEIRWRITINGATTHEENDOFEACHLINELATER
GNITIRWFOYAWAOTDEGNAHCYEHT*
THATFAVOREDRIGHTHANDEDPEOPLEANDSHOWED
WHEREANEWPARAGRAPHBEGANBYUNDERLINING
THEFIRSTLINEOFITLATERTHEGREEKPLAYWRIGHT
ARISTOPHANES . INVERTEDMARKSTOSHOW . WHERE
THEREADERSSHOULDTAKEBREATH:
THE . ROMANS . MADE . WRITING . MUCH . EASIER .
TO . READ . BY . PUTTING . DOTS . BETWEEN . WORDS .
AND . BY . MOVING . THE . FIRST . LETTER . OF . A .
PARAGRAPH . INTO . THE . LEFT . MARGIN: THEY .
ADAPTED . SOME . OF . THE . GREEK . MARKS . SUCH . AS .
THE . COLON . MARK . TO . INDICATE . PHRASE . ENDINGS:
INTHEEARLYMIDDLEAGESTHISSYSTEMOFPUNCTUATION
BROKEDOWNBECAUSEEVERYFEWPEOPLECOULDREAD
ANDWRITE BUTWRITERSKEPTASPACEATTHEENDOF
ASENTENCEANDCONTINUEDTOMARKPARAGRAPHS
EVENTUALLY WORDS WERESEPARATED AGAIN AND
NEW SENTENCES BEGAN WITH A LARGER LETTER
*Hint:Try reading from right to left.
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Task 4: The Best Clue
Read the poem again, and look out for words or lines that sound like they are examples of alliteration,
assonance, consonance and onomatopoeia. List all of them , and chart them on the space provided
below.
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