This site is powered by
course builder. Create your online course today.
Start now
Create your course
with
Autoplay
Autocomplete
Previous Lesson
Complete and Continue
Songs of Ourselves CAIE IGCSE Volume 2, Part 4 (2025)
Video Lessons
How to Write Essays & Understand the Mark Scheme (18:17)
'After' - Philip Bourke Marston (9:20)
'I hear an Army' - James Joyce (12:32)
'Rhyme of the Dead Self' - A.R.D. Fairburn (15:28)
'Rooms' - Charlotte Mew (16:45)
'Stanzas Written in Dejection, Near Naples' - Percy Bysshe Shelley (23:45)
'Love in a Life' - Robert Browning (10:32)
'Nearing Forty' - Derek Walcott (19:52)
'Waterfall' - Lauris Dorothy Edmond (13:51)
'Verses Written on Her Deathbed at Bath to Her Husband in London' - Mary Monck 'Marinda' (12:44)
'A Leave-Taking' - Algernon Charles Swisburne (21:25)
From 'An Essay on Criticism' - Alexander Pope (21:49)
'The Forsaken Wife' - Elizabeth Thomas (10:42)
'The Character of a Happy Life' - Henry Wotton (19:08)
'I Find no Peace' - Sir Thomas Wyatt (14:23)
'Now Let No Charitable Hope' - Elinor Morton Wylie (11:28)
Poem Analysis (PDF)
'After' - Philip Bourke Marston
'I Hear an Army' - James Joyce
'Rhyme of the Dead Self' - A.R.D. Fairburn
'Rooms' - Charlotte Mew
'Stanzas Written in Dejection, Near Naples' - Percy Bysshe Shelley
'Love in a Life' - Robert Browning
'Nearing Forty' - Derek Walcott
'Waterfall' - Lauris Dorothy Edmond
'Verses Written on Her Death-bed at Bath to Her Husband in London' - Mary Monck 'Marinda'
'A Leave-Taking' - Algernon Charles Swisburne
'From An Essay on Criticism' - Alexander Pope
'The Forsaken Wife' - Elizabeth Thomas
'The Character of a Happy Life' - Henry Wotton
'I Find no Peace' - Sir Thomas Wyatt
'Now Let No Charitable Hope' - Elinor Morton Wylie
BONUS MATERIAL:
How to Write Essays + Understand the Mark Scheme
Assessment Objectives and What They Mean: CIE / Cambridge IGCSE Literature (0475 / 0992)
'The Planners' Poetry Essay (B-A Grade L6-L7)
Example A (L7) grade GCSE/IGCSE Essay: Ozymandias + Power
'Stanzas Written in Dejection, Near Naples' - Percy Bysshe Shelley
Lesson content locked
If you're already enrolled,
you'll need to login
.
Enroll in Course to Unlock