Browse
Browse Subjects
Browse Genres
Premade Playlists
Clips by Standards
Vocabulary Finder
Movie Recommendations
Help
Use Cases
Resources
Training Videos
Help Center
Contact us
Sign in
New to ClassHook?
Sign up today!
Email Address
Password
forgot password?
Remember me
or
Sign in required
×
Sign up to
gain access to lesson features.
Create a free account
Already have an account?
Sign in
Sign in to access great benefits
×
Watch more clips for free
Organize clips into playlists
Access discussion questions and standards
Upload your own clips
And more
Create a free account
Already have an account?
Sign in
Sonnet 18
From
Doctors
MS
HS
C
Assign
Discuss
Add to Playlist
Share
Share this clip
×
Embed
Facebook
Twitter
Classroom
Email
Link
Copy
Google Slides and PowerPoint
Google Slides and PowerPoint
Copy
Website, Blog, LMS
Subtitles settings
Subtitles Settings
×
Subtitles
Notice: Subtitles generated automatically.
Censor profanity
Notice: Replaces all profanity in subtitles with censored text.
Skip profanity
Notice: Automatically skips past the moments in the clip containing profanity.
00:00 - 01:47
1m 47s
Lorna Laidlaw from BBC's Doctors performs SHakespeare's Sonnet 18.
poetry
speaking and presentation
shakespeare
Comments
Please
sign in
to write a comment.
Video Transcript
Related Clips
The Andy Griffith Show: Romeo, Juliet, and their Soliloquies
04:09
E
MS
HS
soliloquy
shakespeare
english language arts
Andy recounts the story of Romeo and Juliet to Opie, teaching him about soliloquies in the meantime.
The Cosby Show: Julius Caesar Rap
01:39
MS
HS
william shakespeare
shakespeare
roman history
julius caesar
Theo and Cockroach are studying for their history class and make a song about Julius Caesar.
The Blind Side: Language Arts
04:18
MS
HS
C
the charge of the light brigade
Michael Oher connects the poem, "The Charge of the Light Brigade" by Alfred Lord Tennyson, to football and relates it to courage and honor.
The Great Debaters: Revolution
02:11
MS
HS
C
renaissance
langston hughes
gwendolyn bennett
harlem renaissance
Mr. Tolson recites "I, Too" from Langston Hughes and a poem from Gwendolyn Bennett to set the scene for introducing new voices of a revolution in Harlem.
Frasier: Goodnight Seattle
01:56
MS
HS
interpreting poems
lord tennyson
ulysses
Frasier ends his radio channel by reciting his favorite poem, Ulysses by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. He explains what the poem means to him over the air.