Packet C: Bonus 3

Coleman Barks’ rendering of this poet’s line “out beyond ideas of right and wrong, there is a field” removes its religious connotation. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name this poet who wrote of an instrument that’s “played with fire, not with wind” in “The Song of the Reed Flute.”
ANSWER: Rumi [or Jalal ad-Din Mohammad Rumi; or Jalal ad-Din Mohammad Balkhi; accept Mowlana or Mevlana or Mevlevi]
[10e] Coleman Barks popularized Rumi in the West through “interpretations” of his Masnavi, a Sufi-inspired collection of these rhyming two-line stanzas.
ANSWER: couplets [accept Spiritual Couplets]
[10m] In Barks’ version of the Masnavi, a parable about one of these animals in the dark loses a seafoam metaphor and is framed as being shown by Hindus. A George Orwell essay recounts his experience shooting one of these animals.
ANSWER: elephants [accept “Shooting an Elephant”]
<Edinburgh D, World Literature> | Packet C

HeardPPBE %M %H %
11017.0079%78%13%

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Conversion


Summary

TournamentEditionMatchHeardPPBE %M %H %
Northern CaliforniaMain420.00100%100%0%
Eastern Canada (1)Main410.0025%50%25%
Eastern Canada (2)Main1021.0060%100%50%
FloridaMain412.5075%50%0%
Great LakesMain1016.0070%90%0%
Lower Mid-AtlanticMain917.7889%78%11%
Upper Mid-AtlanticMain917.7878%89%11%
MidwestMain917.7878%89%11%
NorthMain417.50100%75%0%
NortheastMain1120.0091%91%18%
South CentralMain618.3383%100%0%
SoutheastMain1214.1775%50%17%
Upstate NYMain520.00100%80%20%
UK (North)UK510.0080%20%0%
UK (South)UK816.2588%75%0%