Sunday, October 31, 2010

I'm taking this week off.  Hope you had a great weekend!

Sunday, October 24, 2010

The Coming of Wisdom with Time

William Butler Yeats

though leaves are many, the root is one;
Through all the lying days of my youth
I swayed my leaves and flowers in the sun;
Now I may wither into the truth.

     Although it's a short poem, it definitely doesn't lack any meaning.  The picture of the tree (on the right) is the visual image I had while reading the poem.  I interpreted the first line as Yeats comparing himself to a tree.  As a tree grows, it loses leaves but, in time, grows new ones.  The same is comparable to a person.  As a person grows, they gain new thoughts, ideas, or wisdom.  In both cases, they are still either a tree or person, but with change.  The second and third lines are about childhood and how carefree children live.  As a child, you would go with the flow or in this case, the breeze.  In the last line, I believed Yeats is saying wisdom and truth will eventually destroy you. 

Saturday, October 16, 2010

A Work of Artifice

Marge Piercy

The bonsai tree
in the attractive pot
could have grown eighty feet tall
on the side of the mountain
till split by lightning.
But a gardener
carefully pruned it.
It is nine inches high.
Every day as he
whittles back the branches
the gardener croons,
It is your nature
to be small and cozy,
domestic and weak;
how lucky, little tree,
to have a pot to grow in.
With living creatures
one must begin very early
to dwarf their growth:
the bound feet,
the crippled brain,
the hair in curlers
the hands you
love to touch.





     Marge Piercy was born March 31, 1936 in Detroit.  She lived through the depression and was deeply affected by it.  She was the first person in her family to attend college.  Her poetry often addresses feminist and social issues. 
     Bonsai is a Japanese art form using miniature trees grown in containers.  This tradition dates back thousands of years. 
     Although Piercy was clearly talking about Bonsai trees, I saw a deeper meaning in the poem.  I think that she is saying we, as people, have so much potential but it is never put to use.  The third line of the poem really stood out to me.  She says could have grown eighty feet tall, which is referring to the tree.  Her word choice is what really struck me.  Piercy uses the words could have, as in the tree had the potential to be something great and magnificent. It goes on to say how a gardener kept it at nine inches tall and from reaching its true potential.  I compared this to humans.  We are all capable of achieving great things, but we are not brought up to our full potential.  Lines 20 through 24 I didn't quite understand.  In line 20, it thought of foot binding, which was used in Chinese culture, but I'm not sure if I'm on the right path there or not...

The Great Gatsby

     Overall, I really enjoyed reading the book.  Fitzgerald's style of writing was very straightforward and relaxed, which made it a lot easier to read than "Heart of Darkness".  I also found the plot never dull or boring.
     A quick summary of the book is Nick moves to New York for the summer and there he meets his neighbor, Jay Gatsby.  Nick's cousin, Daisy Buchanan, lives in East Egg with her husband, Tom.  East Egg is where people with "old money" lives, and West Egg is for people with "new money".  Through Daisy, Nick meets Jordan Baker and they develop a relationship.  Tom is having an affair on Daisy with Myrtle Wilson.  Gatsby tells Nick that he is deeply in love with Daisy.  It's kinda one big soap opera, but with a deeper meaning behind it all.  Upon Gatsby's request, Nick sets up a reunion for Gatsby and Daisy, but that didn't turn out as anticipated.  After awhile, Tom realizes Gatsby's love for Daisy, and is furious.  He then tells Daisy that Gatsby is a criminal.  Tom then confronts Gatsby in a hotel room with Daisy there and Daisy realizes she is stuck with Tom.  Tom sends Gatsby and Daisy back to East Egg from the city to prove Gatsby can't hurt him.  On the way back, with Daisy driving the car, she hits and kills Myrtle.  Myrtle's husband, who thinks it was Gatsby that killed his wife, hunts him down and kills him.  Nick has a funeral for Gatsby, breaks up with Jordan, and leaves New York.  Pretty crazy stuff, but it kept me entertained for the most part. 
     The most interesting character to me would have to be Jay Gatsby.  I choose him because he's so mysterious and very crucial to the story.  Gatsby is the protagonist and one of the main characters in "The Great Gatsby".  Gatsby had a "false pursuit of happiness".  What I mean by that is he was throwing the parties and lived such a lavish lifestyles for all the wrong reasons.  He was only trying to win Daisy's love, and he believed if he did that then he would be happy.  I personally would disagree with him because you should find happiness within yourself, not others. 
     One of the themes that I found very interesting was the hollowness in the upper class.  I can relate this to my time period, with the moral less celebrities.  In "The Great Gatsby", Fitzgerald portrays West Egg as having gaudy taste, being vulgar, and lacking morals.   
    

Heart of Darkness

     Initially, I wasn't too impressed with Heart of Darkness, but as I kept flipping through the pages, it grew on me.  Although it still isn't my favorite book of all time, I definitely have a great appreciation for this work of literature.  Conrad's extensive use of challenging vocabulary was difficult to get accustom to at first, as well as his lengthy sentences.  I would quite often catch myself having to reread a page two or three times before I was able to decipher what Conrad's point was. 
     The first chapter was the longest to get through, especially when you consider it's just about half of the book.  It starts out with the narrator on board the Nellie on the Thames River.  This is where he meets Marlow and his story begins.   
     Throughout the book I noticed a lot of unnecessary violence and cruelty.  Conrad definitely choose a fitting title for the book.  I noticed that as Marlow's story progressed, he became more accustomed to the evil of mankind and it was starting to change him.  When Marlow was first introduced to the indecency of men at the station.  They had enslaved the natives because they were too lazy to do their own jobs.  Marlow was astonished by this and that the natives were dying everywhere around him while the white men did nothing to try and save them.  Later on in the book, after Marlow finds Kurtz, he sees the heads on sticks.  Marlow reacts to this as if it wasn't a big deal at all. 
     Conrad also uses light and dark as symbols.  On the contrary to popular usage, light doesn't resemble purity or good.  A reoccurring event in the book is the light would always bring out the darkness.  Examples of this is the white ivory, the fog, and even the white men. 
     "The horror! The horror!",  Kurtz's last words before he died.  I interpreted this as the horrors that lies within our self and there is no escape possible. 
    I definitely won't say I'm never ever going to read this book again, because someday I probably will.  It just isn't on the top of my list to reread.  The reason why I think I would read it again is because I will understand more of what's going on and be able to pick up on more symbols or foreshadowing, making it more enjoyable.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

I, Too, Sing America

I, Too, Sing America
Langston Hughes

I, too, sing America

I am the darker brother.
They send me to eat in the kitchen
When company comes,
But I laugh,
And eat well,
And grow strong.

Tomorrow,
I'll be at the table
When company comes.
Nobody'll dare
Say to me,
"Eat in the kitchen,"
Then.

Besides,
They'll see how beautiful I am
And be ashamed--

I, too, am America.


     I love this poem! A little background knowledge on Langston Hughes is he best known for his work throughout the Harlem Renaissance.  Along with being a poet, Hughes was a novelist, playwright, short story writer, and columnist. 













     In line two, when he says, I am the darker brother, it reminds me of chicken, for some peculiar reason.  Although this may seem very random and out there, it makes sense if you think about it.  Chickens have white and dark meat, but it is still just one chicken.  People can be white or black, but we are all still one family.  In line eight, when he says, tomorrow, it gives hope for a change.  That is my one of my favorite lines in the poem because that's what America is about, hope and having your dreams come true.  The rest of that stanza is about having the strength and courage to fight for your dreams and be able to cope with whatever the outcome may be.  In the next stanza, it's a little depressing.  His white brothers will realize he is just like them, but they are ashamed of the fact.  In the last line, Hughes says, I, too, am America. I think that this is the most crucial line in the poem because he is telling everybody that he, along with everybody else in this country, is American no matter what their background is.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Still Memory

The dream was so deep
the bed came unroped from its moorings,
drifted upstream till it found my old notch

in the house I grew up in,
then it locked in place.
A light in the hall—

my father in the doorway, not dead,
just home from the graveyard shift
smelling of crude oil and solvent.

In the kitchen, Mother rummages through silver
while the boiled water poured
in the battered old drip pot

unleashes coffee’s smoky odor.
Outside, the mimosa fronds, closed all night,
open their narrow valleys for dew.

Around us, the town is just growing animate,
its pulleys and levers set in motion.
My house starts to throb in its old socket.

My twelve-year-old sister steps fast
because the bathroom tiles
are cold and we have no heat other

than what our bodies can carry.
My parents are not yet born each
into a small urn of ash.

My ten-year-old hand reaches
for a pen to record it all
as would become long habit.

—Mary Karr

     This poem can be interpreted in many different ways.  The way I choose to was that Karr was in a dream about her childhood.  In the first stanza, she is describing how she entered the dream.  She compares her bed to a boat in lines two and three.  In the third line she says her bed drifted upstream, and normally things drift downstream.  I took this as she was going upstream because she was visiting her past, which she has already "sailed" by in life.  In the next stanza, Karr says where her dream took her.  It was her house she lived in as a child.  The following stanzas go on to describe her memories.  You can conclude that her family was poor.  In lines 23 and 24, she implies that her parents died later on in her life.  In the last stanza, she writes down her memories because she doesn't want to forget them and so she can revisit them later. Overall, I liked this poem.  I could really connect to it because I've had dreams that have reminded me of old memories.