![Portrait of rosy-faced Shakespeare in elaborate doublet and high lace collar.](http://openlab.bmcc.cuny.edu/eng-201-introduction-to-literature-fall-7w1-conway/wp-content/uploads/sites/3149/2019/12/william-shakespeare-62936_960_720-209x300.jpg)
Activity 1
Click this link to review a brief introduction to poetry.
Authored by: Tom Chester. Provided by: Ivy Tech Community College. License: CC BY: Attribution
Activity 2
Click this link for a helpful and insightful article on the American Academy of Poets, “How to Read a Poem”
Activity 3
Please watch this short video, which explains the difference between English and Italian sonnets and discusses common themes that are usually the subject of these highly structured poems.
Activity 4
![Portrait of Queen Elizabeth 1 of England in elaborate costume](http://openlab.bmcc.cuny.edu/eng-201-introduction-to-literature-fall-7w1-conway/wp-content/uploads/sites/145/2019/12/Elizabeth_I_Armada_Portrait-300x240.jpg)
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Please enjoy an interactive reading of Sonnet 18 by William Shakespeare, “Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day.”
Activity 5
Click this link to access Sonnet Number 130, “My Mistress’s Eyes Are Nothing like the Sun” by William Shakespeare.
[OER Source:
https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/my-mistress-eyes-are-nothing-sun-sonnet-130
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![1513 portrait of duchess with ugly, masculine face](http://openlab.bmcc.cuny.edu/eng-201-introduction-to-literature-fall-7w1-conway/wp-content/uploads/sites/3149/2023/06/Ugly-Woman-1513-237x300.jpg)
CC0
Activity 6
Click here for a short lecture on Sonnet 130, “My Mistress’s Eyes Are Nothing like the Sun.”
Click this link to access the Italian sonnet, “How Do I Love Thee” by Elizabeth Barrett Browning on the Commonlit website.
Click this link to a commercial poem that contrasts in quality to the sonnet above. As a student of literature, how would you compare/contrast the greeting card lyrics to the Browning sonnet? What differentiates them from each other?
Activity 8
Click this link to access a reading of the Italian sonnet, “What My Lips Have Kissed and Why and When” by Edna Saint Vincent Millay.
Activity 9
![Trees and Marshland with Cloudy Grey sky](https://openlab.bmcc.cuny.edu/eng-201-introduction-to-literature-spring-2023-celeste-conway/wp-content/uploads/sites/2880/2020/08/PIXNIO-2201565-6000x4000-1-300x200.jpeg)
Public Domain CC0
Click this link to access “The Lake Isle of Innisfree” on the Poets.org website. Click the audio icon, and you will hear a very memorable and dramatic recitation of the poem by the author himself.
“The Lake Isle of Innisfree” is characterized as a lyric poem .
Click this link to read more about William Butler Yeats on the BMCC database Biography in Context.
OER source: https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/lake-isle-innisfree
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Activity 10
Click this link to access the poem “My Last Duchess”
on on the Commonlit website. This is written as a monologue and is an example of a dramatic poem.
Or click this link.
![Portrait of beautiful young woman in regal 16th Century costume](http://openlab.bmcc.cuny.edu/eng-201-introduction-to-literature-fall-7w1-conway/wp-content/uploads/sites/3149/2021/04/MyLastDuchessAgnolo_Bronzino_ritratto_di_Lucrezia_de_Medici-220x300.jpg)
Public Domain
Activity 11
Click this link for my video lecture on “My Last Duchess” by Robert Browning.
![Profile portrait of mixed race young woman](http://openlab.bmcc.cuny.edu/eng-201-introduction-to-literature-fall-7w1-conway/wp-content/uploads/sites/3149/2020/01/Joanna_Boyce_Wells_-_Head_of_a_Mulatto_Woman_Mrs._Eaton_-_Google_Art_Project-228x300.jpg)
Public domain
Activity 12
Click this link to access the poem “White Lies” by Natasha Tretheway. This is an example of a narrative poem.
Activity 14
Please read “We Real Cool” and “The Mother” by Gwendolyn Brooks.
Activity 15
Essay Final Draft due: Sunday, October 8.
Click here to access Essay Final Draft directions.
All essays in this class must adhere to MLA format. Before submitting any written work, please review the following guides to formatting. Only correctly formatted essays will be eligible for a grade of A.
Click here for a short PowerPoint “How to Insert quotes into a literary essay.
To submit your essay, navigate to your Blackboard course. Click on “Essay Submission Links.” Then click on the Essay Second Draft folder.
How to find biographical information databases in the BMCC library databases.
Click this link for a guide to finding literary articles in the online college library from general or “one-stop” sources.
All essays in this class must adhere to MLA format. Before submitting any written work, please review the following guides to formatting. Only correctly formatted essays will be eligible for a grade of A.
To submit your essay, navigate to your Blackboard course. Click on “Essay Submission Links.” Then click on the Essay Second Draft folder.
Student Sample Essay (Any submissions that duplicate this sample in any way will be rejected and a rewrite will be required)
Activity 16
![stone statue of phinx](http://openlab.bmcc.cuny.edu/eng-201-introduction-to-literature-fall-7w1-conway/wp-content/uploads/sites/3149/2023/05/sphinx-statue-218x300.jpg)
CC BY-3.0
Quiz 4
This is a 10-question multiple-choice quiz, which tests your knowledge about the conventions of ancient Greek theater, as well as your understanding of the drama Oedipus the King by Sophocles. Students have 90 minutes to complete the quiz, which must be done in one sitting. Quiz will be available from 9:00 a.m., Monday, September 25 through 11:59 p.m., October 1. Once the quiz has closed, it will become unavailable and unviewable. Quizzes will not be reopened.
To access the quiz, navigate to your Blackboard course. On the dark grey navigation panel to the left, click “Links to Quizzes.” Then click “Quiz 4.”