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Flirtation by rita dove3/1/2024 Make sure to Subscribe or Follow, Rate and Review to help others find the podcast. Listen by clicking 'Play' on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever it is you're listening now. Please note this series contains explicit language, adult themes and the consumption of alcohol. With the occasional special guest, join the pair as they discover what it really takes to stay relevant in the public eye today. Whether that's the public appearances gone wrong, the brand campaigns we'd rather forget, or the reality TV that still haunts us - nothing is off the cards. Join Sam Thompson & Pete Wicks on their weekly quest for fame. Maybe you think classical music isn’t for you? Or you know a little and want to know more? Or perhaps it's been a lifetime love? Regardless, you definitely need to meet Joanna & The Maestro. Who was better: Mozart or Beethoven? Why do certain pieces of music make us feel a certain way? What do conductors actually do? They also discuss the great composers and symphonies, and the often-remarkable stories behind them, all delivered in Joanna and Stephen’s unique, engaging and affectionate way. Joanna is the enthusiastic amateur - asking the questions she’s always wanted to ask - and Stephen is The Maestro, providing the answers. On this, their new podcast, the pair welcome you into their home for a personal, fascinating and funny journey through a musical world. You probably know Joanna Lumley, but you may not be aware that her husband Stephen Barlow is a famed conductor, composer and musician - and the pair of them are passionate about classical music. This throws the reader off, since they won’t have a rhythm to count to, but it still relates to the meaning of passion in the poem.Joanna Lumley and her husband Stephen Barlow invite you into their home for a fascinating, funny journey into their shared love of music. One line would have 5 syllables, and the next one would have 7, and so on. Instead, each of her lines has different number of syllables. In Dove’s poem, she doesn’t have a consistent meter. With rhythm and rhyme, this phrase would be irrelevant and could be a completely different theme, but without rhythm and rhyme, the topic can stand out, without the help of sound devices. The way she puts out anything can happen gives the reason what the poem is about. The second sentence (lines 3-5) shows another idea, but it is irrelevant at first, but when the audience can see that “Anything can happen”, the audience can see how it connects. She goes on with one thing, but then she transfers into another thing. The way she separates the first sentence, “After all, there’s no need to say anything at first.”, she interrupts the third line. In the poem, Dove separates the sentences, giving it a bit of effect. All poems do not need a rhythm in order to make sense. In the poem, there is no natural rhyme scheme or rhythm, but it helps the poem stand out. Because of this, there is a reason why the poem has no natural rhyme or rhythm. The poem is a free verse poem, letting the low of the words travel down on the paper. Instead, the way the words are set up leaves a passionate meaning behind the poem, making an emphasis on the subject without the use of sound devices. Rita Dove’s poem, “Flirtation”, there is no natural rhyme or rhythm.
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