Monday, June 23, 2008
Gerald Manley Hopkins
Virginia Woolf
Victorian Ladies and Gentlemen
(556). There were women such as Florence Nightingale who did not believe in this and tried to make a career outside the home. On the other hand there were women like Sarah Ellis who accepted the fact that women needed to stay in their place, and just wanted for her family and herself to be happy. There were different out looks on the roles of women during these times. Things have completely changed since then in our society, because women are now seen taking over companies, working outside the home, and we are also now allowed to vote.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Thomas Carlyle
The Industrial Revolution
John Keats
“his soul shall taste the sadness of her might,
And be among her cloudy trophies hung” (442).
After she died, the heavens poured out as if it was crying and he pointed out that
“Sudden from heaven like a weeping cloud” (442).
It was a sad poem, but beautifully written. John Keats was a fantastic author who lived a short life, he would’ve accomplished a lot more.
Felicia Hemans
I think that if Felicia hemans lived during our time and century, she would fit in quite well. She was independent, raising five kids and single. She would be considered a role model in today’s society. After the abandonment of her husband, she took her children to move in with her mother. She was determined to make it as a single parent to support her family with her writing. Who knew a woman from her time could get so much recognition. She had a great feministic attitude, which portrayed in her work. The abandonment of her husband and her father helped to inspire her to write great works. She portrayed women as strong leaders, and she looked down upon men. She was much more independent than the other female writer we discussed Dorothy Wordswrth. Hemans wanted her woks to be published and she had support from her own children, whereas Wordsworth was mainly dependent upon William and didn’t want her writings to be published. Her personality wasn’t as strong either. I have a lot of respect for Hemans. “Woman and Fame” caught my eye when I read it. In the lines
“A hollow sound is in thy song,
A mockery in thine eye,
To the sick heart that doth but long
For aid, for sympathy; for kindly looks to cheer it on,
For tender accents that are gone.”
I see a strong woman who has been through a lot of suffering but still continues to pull herself up and move on. I’m not sure if that’s what it really means, but it just seems like people try to take advantage of women and she’s just trying to get the point across that women can move on up and get over it.
John Stuart Mill
World War I
Robert Browning
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
William Butler Yeats
T.S Eliot
Thomas Hardy
I really enjoyed Thomas Hardy’s poem, “The Convergence of the Twain”. He was describing the incredible event of the sinking of the Titanic (which is actually one of my favorite movies). When the Titanic was first built, it was considered a ship that couldn’t sink, and also only the mostly those who were wealthy use to fill the boat. This is described in the first stanza. In lines 7 and 8, it’s describing how magnificent things use to fill the boat and be reflected by the mirrors, but now all that is left are “sea-worms-grotesque, slimed, dumb, indifferent.”
He mentions an “Immanent Will” which I believe is the supernatural thing that causes the Titanic to meet with the Iceberg. The speaker makes it seem it was inevitable for the iceberg and the titanic not to hit. The poem makes it seemed like it was planned. It was as if they were destined to for them to collide because of this line, “On being anon twin halves of one august event.” It seemed as though Thomas Hardy thought the Titanic had it coming to it, because it was all the greed and luxury that brought this liner down to its fate into the see. The people in the boat wanted to get to the United States soon enough to get in the paper the next morning, and with that, now all it is now is an ornament on the bottom of the see.
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Charles Dickens
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
“For the dear God who loveth us,
He made and loveth all” (341)
I believe he is telling us that God made us to love another and also to love all creatures for He loves us, and we should not take advantage of what he gave us, and we should appreciate what all he’s done for us. Regardless what was going on throughout the whole time of the wedding, the wedding guest seems to be only intrigued and entertained by the tale of the mariner. He left the wedding a “sadder and a wiser man,” which means he might’ve learned the lesson from this story (341).
Dorothy Wordsworth
In Dorothy’s writings, I can tell she really loves nature, and it showed in her works. Her admiration of her brother was often revealed in her poetry especially in her poem Thoughts on My Sick Bed. She made several references of his poems throughout her own work. Her love of nature also appeared in this poem, because in every stanza, even while in sick and in bed, she describes in great description of flowers and animals. It must have bothered her greatly to be confined inside and not being able to enjoy the outside world. When she says
“yet never in those careless days,
When springtime in rock, field, or bower,
Was but a fountain of earthly hope
A promise of fruits and the splendid flower."
I can actually tell she had a respect for nature, and how peaceful it made her. In “The Grasmere Journals” she describes the wilderness and wildlife that she sees in great detail that I can vividly picture them in my own mind as if I were there. “A beautiful, yellow, palish yellow flower, that looked thick round, and double, and smelt very sweet” (294). That quote stuck out to be. A person who was not fond of nature would not go into such detail in describing a simple thing like a flower in this way. She had great works, and it’s a shame that she did not make more effort into publishing more of her work.
Thursday, June 19, 2008
William Wordsworth
I found the poem somewhat ironic. In the first stanza he writes
“A simple child, dear brother Jim,
That lightly draws it’s breath,
And feels its life in every limb,
What should it know of death?” (200)
Although he describes the child as “simple,” she is quite more complex throughout the poem. He also says “What should it know of death?” We often think of children being innocent and not really experiencing or knowing of death because of such young age. As the poem goes on, I realize that the child does actually no more about death than most have. We find out later that she has 2 deceased siblings. And while she is aware of this fact, there is an innocence about her that makes her still acknowledge that her siblings are present. Their graves are in close proximity to the house and she visits with them often as though they were still alive. As much as she is debated with the fact that she now only has 5 siblings, she holds her guards up and acknowledges there are still seven, even till the end of the poem,
“But they are dead: those two are dead!
Their spirits are in heaven!”
Twas throwing words away; for still
The little Maid would have her will,
And said, “Nay, we are seven!” (201)
Wordsworth probably could relate to this girl because he too was quite young when he lost his own parents. He could have also believed that although his parents were deceased could not come to terms with the true meaning of death. After talking to the girl, it may have inspired him to write this poem. He may have also told people that his parents were still among them.
Monday, June 16, 2008
William Blake
"He is called by thy name
For he calls himself a Lamb:
He is meek & mild,
He became a little child" (79)
In the bible, and usually when addressing God by any of his name, such as Lord, Yahweh, or Jesus, we see His name capitalized, for he capitalizes Lamb whenever he uses it. God made this Lamb perfect as He did His only son.
The tone in this poem is also quite gentle and pleasant.
In his poem the Chimney Sweeper, he describes a child that had just been sold away to become a chimney sweeper. According to the footnotes this was quite common during these times. As i read this poem, there was such a sadness and darkness that these children live in. While awake, they live in a reality in which is dark and filled with soot. The soot covers up these children's innocence and blocks out a sense of hope for these children. When Tom falls asleep, it is the one time in the poem when Blake brings in light. In stanza 15,
"and by came an Angel who had a bright key
And he open'd the coffins and set them all free.
Then down a green plain leaping laughing they run
And wash in a river and shine in the Sun." (81)
Blake uses an angel and nature to display happiness and innocence that can only be acquired while Tom sleeps. The thought of heaven and nature usually bring a sense of security, but Tom loses this when he wakes back up to his dark reality.