This is my wish for you:

Comfort on difficult days, smiles when sadness intrudes, rainbows to follow the clouds, laughter to kiss your lips, sunsets to warm your heart, hugs when spirits sag, beauty for your eyes to see, friendships to brighten your being, faith so that you can believe, confidence for when you doubt, courage to know yourself, patience to accept the truth, love to complete your life.

(Author Unknown)



Literature adds to reality, it does not simply describe it. It enriches the necessary competencies that daily life requires and provides; and in this respect, it irrigates the deserts that our lives have already become.

(Author: Clive Staples Lewis)


Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Teaching Literature - Analysis of the poem 'Success is counted sweetest (67)' by Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)


Profa. Dra. Bárbara de Fátima.




A bit about the author:
Born - December 10 - Amherst - Massachusetts.
Died - May 16.
Family:
Grandfather - a leader in founding Amherst College.
Father - a successful lawyer. He became a Member of Congress, and served the College as a trustee. He was ita treasurer. He was a stern and authoritarian moralist. When he spoke his timid wife trembled and was silent.
Hometown: Amherst was a small town and rigid world. The church wielded the highest authority. 
Emily:
- She had a rebellious spirit.
- Her sister-in-law became her confidante.
- In her poems she constructed her own world (of her garden, of the beautiful Connecticut Valley scenery, of the books, e. g. forbidden books, of her private and quite startling thoughts, of her few friends at Amherst Academy, a deeply religious person).
- She visited Washington, Philadelphia, and Boston. 
_ In 1848 she met Ben Newton (He was a brilliant free-thinker, he introduced her to a new world of ideas, but he was too poor to marry).
- In 1854 she met Reverend Charles Wadsworth in Philadelphia (he tried to teach her immortality).
- She spent her middle years as White-clad recluse, but she had contact with the outer world through Helen Hunt Jackson (her girlhood friend) and Thomas Wentworth Higginson (a literary friend of the family).
- Samuel Bowles – Editor of the famous Springfield Republican – only seven of her poems slipped into print during her lifetime.
- From 1884 until her death she was semi-invalid in a condition of a mental decline.
- Posthumous collections – 1890and 1896 – reputation of a powerful eccentric.
- Later collections – 1914 – established her recognition as a major poet – influence upon Young writers.

Her style:

- Simple yet passionate.
- Marked by economy and concentration.
- Discovered the sharps, intense image is the poet’s Best instrument.
- Antecipated the modern enlargement of melody by assonance, dissonance, and ‘off-rhyme’.
- Discoverd the utility of ellipsis of thought and the verbal ambiguity.

Her ideas:

- Witty and rebellious.
- Original.
- On death and immortality.

Her materials:

- Confined her materials to the world of her small village, her domestic cycle, her garden and a few good books.
- Possessed the most acute awareness of sensory experience and psychological actualities.
- Expressed radical discoveries in the áreas with frankness and force.
- Takes liberties with Grammar, punctuation and capitalization.
- was a product of Amherst Village, where colonial America lingered in puritan overtones. She inherited the tradition of the romantic nature poets; but her realism and psychological truth made her seem contemporary to a much later generation.
- Glimpses of her most private thoughts and feelings (what in nature captures her attention; how she responds to beauty, to pain, to death; her special formo f worship and her haith in God).

Her obsessions:

- The problems of Good and Evil.
- Of life and death.
- The nature and destiny of the human soul. 


       Dickinson's poetry reflects her loneliness and the speakers of her poems generally live in a state of want, but her poems are also marked by the intimate recollection of inspirational moments which are decidedly life-giving and suggest the possibility of happiness. Her work was heavily influenced by the Metaphysical poets of seventeenth-century England, as well as her reading of the Book of Revelation and her upbringing in a Puritan New England town which encouraged a Calvinist, orthodox, and conservative approach to Christianity.
       She admired the poetry of Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, as well as John Keats. Though she was dissuaded from reading the verse of her contemporary Walt Whitman by rumor of its disgracefulness, the two poets are now connected by the distinguished place they hold as the founders of a uniquely American poetic voice. While Dickinson was extremely prolific as a poet and regularly enclosed poems in letters to friends, she was not publicly recognized during her lifetime. The first volume of her work was published posthumously in 1890 and the last in 1955. She died in Amherst in 1886. (Source: poet's.org)


67

by Emily Dickinson


Success is counted sweetest        A
By those who ne'er succeed.         B
To comprehend a nectar              C
Requires sorest need.                  B

Not one of all the purple Host      A
Who took the Flag today             B
Can tell the definition                 C
So clear of Victory                       B

As he defeated - dying -              A
On whose forbidden ear               B
The distant strains of triumph        C   
Burst agonized and clear!             B



This poem was one of the poems to be published in her lifetime. It presents 3 stanzas – 4 verses each stanza- 3 quatrains. Its rhyme scheme is ABCB – the second and the fourth lines of ecah stanza rhyme. It has an extra syllable in the first and third lines. It shows na iambic trimeter (one unaccented syllable followed by one accented).

Point of View:

- It could be a man or a woman, young or old.
- The narrator feels sure that one who has not been victorious can best understand victory (he or she has been on the losing side).
- Might be a dying soldier.


Analysis of each stanza:


First stanza – two statements with similar meaning.

Theme:
- What’s the poem’s primary meaning? The poet’s theme is summarized in the first lines of the poem: success is considered most desirable by those who have never been successful.
- The resto f the poem develops the theme further (to appreciate the good taste of a sweet néctar, one must need to be hungry for it or unfamiliar with it.


Second two stanzas.
- Describe the way in which the victorious soldiers (those Who successfully take the flag are unable to define success;
- Those who have not been successful (those conquered – understand perfectly the nature of victory);
- The poet introduces the Word definition (particularly useful; the entire poem a successful definition of what it means to succeed).
- An expression of the idea of compensation (every evil confers some balancing good; through bitterness we learn to appreciate the sweet).
- The defeated and dying soldier of this poem is compensated by a greater awareness of the meaning of victory than the victorious themselves can.
- He can comprehend the joy of success through its polar contrast to his own despair.
- Emily Dickinson is arguing the superiorityof defeat to victory, of frustration to satisfaction   (a material gain has cost tham a spiritual loss; material loss has led to spiritual gain).
- Its theme is universal, it existis independently of time.
- Its message pertains to all readers.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Teaching Literature - Analysis of the poem "The Tiger" by William Blake (1757-1827)


A bit about the author:
Born: November 28, 1757
London, England
Died: August 12, 1827
London, England
English poet, engraver, and painter

William Blake was an English poet, engraver, and painter. A boldly imaginative rebel in both his thought and his art, he combined poetic and pictorial genius to explore life.

Youth

William Blake was born in London, England, on November 28, 1757, the second son of a mens' clothing merchant. Except for a few years in Sussex, England, his entire life was spent in London. From his earliest years he saw visions. He would see trees full of angels or similar sights. If these were not true mystical visions, they were the result of the artist's intense spiritual understanding of the world. From his early teens Blake wrote poems, often setting them to melodies of his own composition.
At age ten Blake started at the well-known Park's drawing school, and at age fourteen he began a seven-year apprenticeship (studying and practicing under someone skilled) to an engraver. It was as an engraver that Blake earned his living for the rest of his life. After he was twenty-one, Blake studied for a time at the Royal Academy of Arts, but he was unhappy with the instruction and soon left.
In August 1782 Blake married Catherine Boucher, who had fallen in love with him at first sight. He taught her to read and write, and she later became a valued assistant. His "sweet shadow of delight," as Blake called Catherine, was a devoted and loving wife.


The Tiger

                                         by William Blake

Tiger! Tiger! burning bright
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame thy fearful symmetry? 

In what distant deeps or skies
Burnt the fire of thine eyes?
On what wings dare he aspire?
What the hand dare seize the fire? 

And what shoulder, and what art,
Could twist the sinews of thy heart?
And when thy heart began to beat,
What dread hand? and what dread feet? 

 When the stars threw down their spears, 
And watered heaven with their tears,
Did he smile his work to see?
Did he who made the Lamb make thee?

Tiger! Tiger! burning bright 
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Dare frame thy fearful symmetry? 


Type of Work and Year of Publication
 
"The Tiger," originally called "The Tyger," is a lyric poem focusing on the nature of God and his creations. It was published in 1794 in a collection entitled Songs of Experience. Modern anthologies often print "The Tiger" alongside an earlier Blake poem, "The Lamb," published in 1789 in a collection entitled Songs of Innocence.
 
Meter
The poem is in trochaic tetrameter with catalexis at the end of each line. Here is an explanation of these technical terms: 
    Tetrameter Line: a poetry line usually with eight syllables.    
    Trochaic Foot: A pair of syllables-a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable.   
    Catalexis: The absence of a syllable in the final foot in a line. In Blake’s poem, an unstressed syllable is absent in the last foot of each line. Thus, every line has seven syllables, not the conventional eight. 
The following illustration using the first two lines of the poem demonstrates tetrameter with four trochaic feet, the last one catalectic:

    1...........2...............3..................4 
         TIger,..|..TIger,..|..BURN ing..|..BRIGHT..... 
    1..............2...............3...............4 
    IN the..|..FOR ests..|..OF the..|..NIGHT

Notice that the fourth foot in each line eliminates the conventional unstressed syllable (catalexis).  However, this irregularity in the trochaic pattern does not harm the rhythm of the poem. In fact, it may actually enhance it, allowing each line to end with an accented syllable that seems to mimic the beat of the maker’s hammer on the anvil. For a detailed discussion of meter and the various types of feet.





Structure and Rhyme Scheme

The poem consists of six quatrains. (A quatrain is a four-line stanza.) Each quatrain contains two couplets. (A couplet is a pair of rhyming lines). Thus we have a 24-line poem with 12 couplets and 6 stanzas–a neat, balanced package. The question in the final stanza repeats (except for one word, dare) the wording of the first stanza, perhaps suggesting that the question Blake raises will continue to perplex thinkers ad infinitum. 
 
Examples Figures of Speech and Allusions
 
Alliteration: Tiger, tiger, burning bright (line 1);  frame thy fearful symmetry? (line 4)  Metaphor: Comparison of the tiger and his eyes to fire.  
Anaphora: Repetition of what at the beginning of sentences or clauses. Example: What dread hand and what dread feet? / What the hammer? what the chain?
Allusion: Immortal hand or eye: God or Satan  
Allusion: Distant deeps or skies: hell or heaven
 
Symbols
 
The Tiger: Evil (or Satan)  
The Lamb: Goodness (or God)
Distant Deeps: Hell  
Skies: Heaven
 
Themes
 
The Existence of Evil
.......“The Tiger” presents a question that embodies the central theme: Who created the tiger? Was it the kind and loving God who made the lamb? Or was it Satan?  Blake presents his question in Lines 3 and 4:
    What immortal hand or eye  Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
Blake realizes, of course, that God made all the creatures on earth. However, to express his bewilderment that the God who created the gentle lamb also created the terrifying tiger, he includes Satan as a possible creator while raising his rhetorical questions, notably the one he asks in Lines 5 and 6: 

    In what distant deeps or skies Burnt the fire of thy eyes?
Deeps appears to refer to hell and skies to heaven. In either case, there would be fire--the fire of hell or the fire of the stars.
.......Of course, there can be no gainsaying that the tiger symbolizes evil, or the incarnation of evil, and that the lamb (Line 20) represents goodness, or Christ. Blake's inquiry is a variation on an old philosophical and theological question: Why does evil exist in a universe created and ruled by a benevolent God?  Blake provides no answer. His mission is to reflect reality in arresting images. A poet’s first purpose, after all, is to present the world and its denizens in language that stimulates the aesthetic sense; he is not to exhort or moralize. Nevertheless, the poem does stir the reader to deep thought. Here is the tiger, fierce and brutal in its quest for sustenance; there is the lamb, meek and gentle in its quest for survival. Is it possible that the same God who made the lamb also made the tiger? Or was the tiger the devil's work?

The Awe and Mystery of Creation and the Creator

The poem is more about the creator of the tiger than it is about the tiger intself. In contemplating the terrible ferocity and awesome symmetry of the tiger, the speaker is at a loss to explain how the same God who made the lamb could make the tiger. Hence, this theme: humans are incapable of fully understanding the mind of God and the mystery of his handiwork. 

 Summary of the Stanzas
 
1 Tiger, tiger, burning bright In the forests of the night, 
What immortal hand or eye 
Could frame thy fearful symmetry? 
 
Stanza 1 Summary
What immortal being created this terrifying creature which, with its perfect proportions (symmetry), is an awesome killing machine? 


2
In what distant deeps or skies 
Burnt the fire of thine eyes? 
On what wings dare he aspire? 
What the hand dare seize the fire?
 
Stanza 2 Summary
Was it created in hell (distant deeps) or in heaven (skies)? If the creator had wings, how could he get so close to the fire in which the tiger was created? How could he work with so blazing a fire?


3
And what shoulder and what art 
Could twist the sinews of thy heart? 
And when thy heart began to beat, 
What dread hand and what dread feet? 
 
Stanza 3 Summary
What strength (shoulder) and craftsmanship (art) could make the tiger's heart? What being could then stand before it (feet) and shape it further (hand)?


4What the hammer? what the chain? 
In what furnace was thy brain? 
What the anvil? What dread grasp 
Dare its deadly terrors clasp? 
 
Stanza 4 Summary
What kind of tool (hammer) did he use to fashion the tiger in the forge fire? What about the chain connected to the pedal which the maker used to pump the bellows? What of the heat in the furnace and the anvil on which the maker hammered out his creation? How did the maker muster the courage to grasp the tiger? 


5
When the stars threw down their spears, 
And water'd heaven with their tears, 
Did He smile His work to see? 
Did He who made the lamb make thee? 
 
Stanza 5 Summary
When the stars cast their light on the new being and the clouds cried, was the maker pleased with his creation?


6
Tiger, tiger, burning bright 
In the forests of the night, 
What immortal hand or eye 
Dare frame thy fearful symmetry?
 
Stanza 6 Summary
The poet repeats the the central question of the poem, stated in Stanza 1. However, he changes could (Line 4) to dare (Line 24). This is a significant change, for the poet is no longer asking who had the capability of creating the tiger but who dared to create so frightful a creature.

(Source: Guides2.com) 

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

POETRY: Splendour in the Grass

 What though the radiance
 which was once so bright
 Be now for ever taken from my sight,
 Though nothing can bring back the hour
 Of splendour in the grass,
 of glory in the flower,
 We will grieve not, rather find
 Strength in what remains behind;
 In the primal sympathy
 Which having been must ever be;
 In the soothing thoughts that spring
 Out of human suffering;
 In the faith that looks through death,
 In years that bring the philosophic mind.
(Author: William Wordsworth)

William Wordsworth expressed: "Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings." Passion (overall story concern-innermost desires) denied (main vs. impact inhibitor) is the very essence of Splendor in the Grass.The negative feel emanates from focus on avoiding the overall story problem of following your conscience, instead of pursuing the solution-falling to the temptation that will set you free. Director Elia Kazan and writer William Inge present a variation on the Romeo and Juliet theme with an end almost more tragic than that of the classic star-crossed lovers.
Deanie (main character) and Bud (impact character) are the swoon couple in their 1920's Kansas hometown. Sweethearts who dream of living happily ever after (main vs. impact concern-future), their economic and social status (main vs. impact domain-situation) are markedly different. Bud's domineering father pays lip service to his son's wish to marry Deanie and humbly ranch (ic symptom-help)-but is ruthless in his determination (story driver-decision) to avert it from ever happening (ic response-hinder). The town's oil industrialist, Mr. Stamper deftly reminds Bud of his obligation (ic critical flaw) to the family business at every turn.
Deanie is a good girl who wants nothing more than to become (mc concern) Mrs. Bud Stamper. Her mother is enthralled with this prospect as well-but makes certain there is no consummation before a church wedding (mc problem-conscience). Deanie is willing (tendency) to surrender to heedless passion (mc solution-temptation), yet Bud won't allow her to trip off of her pedestal (ic thematic issue-morality). That doesn't stop the local athletics hero from giving into his own urges with the high school hussy (ic thematic counterpoint-self-interest)-who looks remarkably like his "headstrong flapper" boy-crazy sister.
Honor thy father and mother. Deanie and Bud obey this commandment and suffer the consequence. They have no future together. Bud reluctantly goes off to Yale and Deanie goes off of her head (mc domain-manipulation).
After a wrenching and slow recovery, Deanie returns from the psychiatric ward prepared to "forget the ideals (mc signpost 4-conceiving) of youth" (mc resolve-change). In voice over, she recites Wordsworth's poetry:
"...The radiance which was once so bright
Is now forever taken from my sight.
Though nothing can bring back the hour of splendor in the grass
Of glory in the flower
We will grieve not
Rather find strength in what remains behind (judgment-good)."
In the final bittersweet scene, Bud and Deanie bow to the reality of the doomed relationship (outcome-failure)-but there is no desertion of life on prosaic earth, they instead settle for pale imitations of one another (limit-optionlock)-"love's desperate alternatives."

Storyform for "SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS"



CHARACTER DYNAMICS:
MC RESOLVE: Change
MC GROWTH: Stop
MC APPROACH: Be-er
MC PROBLEM SOLVING STYLE: Intuitive

OC RESOLVE: Steadfast
 PLOT DYNAMICS:
DRIVER: Decision
LIMIT: Optionlock
OUTCOME: Failure
JUDGMENT: Good
MAIN VS. IMPACT STORY (The Hopeless Romance)
THROUGHLINE: Situation
CONCERN: The Future
ISSUE: Preconception vs. Openness
PROBLEM: Conscience
SOLUTION: Temptation
SYMPTOM: Logic
RESPONSE: Feeling
CATALYST: Openness
INHIBITOR: Denial
BENCHMARK: How Things are Changing

SIGNPOST 1: The Past
SIGNPOST 2: How Things are Changing
SIGNPOST 3: The Future
SIGNPOST 4: The Present
IMPACT CHARACTER (Bud)
THROUGHLINE: Endeavor
CONCERN: Obtaining
ISSUE: Morality vs. Self Interest
PROBLEM: Support
SOLUTION: Oppose
SYMPTOM: Help
RESPONSE: Hinder
UNIQUE ABILITY: Approach
CRITICAL FLAW: Obligation
BENCHMARK: Doing

SIGNPOST 1: Understanding
SIGNPOST 2: Doing
SIGNPOST 3: Obtaining
SIGNPOST 4: Gathering Information
MAIN CHARACTER (Deanie)
THROUGHLINE: Manipulation
CONCERN: Changing One's Nature
ISSUE: Responsibility vs. Commitment
PROBLEM: Conscience
SOLUTION: Temptation
SYMPTOM: Control
RESPONSE: Uncontrolled
UNIQUE ABILITY: Rationalization
CRITICAL FLAW: Attitude
BENCHMARK: Playing a Role

SIGNPOST 1: Developing a Plan
SIGNPOST 2: Playing a Role
SIGNPOST 3: Changing One's Nature
SIGNPOST 4: Conceiving an Idea
OVERALL STORY (Fighting Social/Parental Mores)
THROUGHLINE: Fixed Attitude
CONCERN: Innermost Desires
ISSUE: Denial vs. Closure
PROBLEM: Conscience
SOLUTION: Temptation
SYMPTOM: Help
RESPONSE: Hinder
CATALYST: Closure
INHIBITOR: Preconception
BENCHMARK: Impulsive Responses

SIGNPOST 1: Memories
SIGNPOST 2: Innermost Desires
SIGNPOST 3: Contemplation
SIGNPOST 4: Impulsive Responses
 ADDITIONAL STORY APPRECIATIONS:
GOAL: Innermost Desires
CONSEQUENCE: The Future
COST: Obtaining
DIVIDEND: Changing One's Nature
REQUIREMENT: Impulsive Responses
PREREQUISITE: How Things are Changing
PRECONDITION: Doing
FOREWARNINGS: Playing a Role

POETRY: Aunt Jennifer's tigers

Aunt Jennifer's tigers prance across a screen,
Bright topaz denizens of a world of green.
They do not fear the men beneath the tree;
They pace in sleek chivalric certainty.

Aunt Jennifer's finger fluttering through her wool
Find even the ivory needle hard to pull.
The massive weight of Uncle's wedding band
Sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer's hand.

When Aunt is dead, her terrified hands will lie
Still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by.
The tigers in the panel that she made
Will go on prancing, proud and unafraid.

(Autor: Adrienne Rich)


Analysis of the Poem:

Adrienne Rich's "Aunt Jennifer Tigers" is a poem that concerns itself mainly with a woman struggling to accept the indignities of her daily life while being insatiably focused on attaining some sense of immortality once that life ends. Aunt Jennifer must find a way to deal with her unhappy and submissive station in life, and she does so by sewing exciting and memorable works of art. Sewing is her escape and in this case she's escaping to a jungle where wild animals rule the land and never show fear. The tigers created by Aunt Jennifer are beasts demanding respect from even their predators. This demand for respect is something that Aunt Jennifer is incapable of doing for herself. In the meantime, she will deal with her problems by escaping from them. 

This escape into her art is shown vividly in the opening stanza of the poem where the imagery is vibrant and alive and shows what Aunt Jennifer is capable of doing; it also provides a glimpse into Aunt Jennifer's subconscious in its portrayal of animals who don't allow themselves to be victimized by anyone. The tigers are literally prancing across the screen. The image of something prancing immediately brings to mind a being that is confident and self-assured and happy; all things that Aunt Jennifer is not. The tigers are not just simply tigers, of course. They are "Bright topaz denizens of a world of green" (2). The use of colors implies that Aunt Jennifer's tigers and their land are more vital and enjoy a sense of freedom far greater than she. Yellow connotes the sun and fierce energy, while green reminds one of spring and rebirth. Aunt Jennifer is longing for both energy and rebirth. She cannot find it at home so she goes on journeys into her sewing. The tigers are foreign and that also brings speculation that Aunt Jennifer would like to travel, which is just another form escape. That the tigers sense no fear of the predatory hunters is key. The assumption here is that Aunt Jennifer is afraid of her own predator: her husband. He has hunted her and captured her and keeps her in a cage from which her only escape is her sewing. The tigers, on the other hand, do not live in fear. No, rather they pace about as if they were kings of their domain. They are certain of their place in the world and will allow no one or nothing to interfere. The tigers are to Aunt Jennifer the ultimate creatures of self-actualization. They are exactly what she wishes she could be herself. And in creating them so resplendently, they will live on long after their creator has passed on.

Aunt Jennifer is doing what she can to cope with an unhappy lifestyle and this melancholy is made apparent in the second stanza of the poem, which deals in ambiguous images of rapidity and heaviness to symbolize the need to escape from the stagnancy of her marriage. Aunt Jennifer's fingers are "fluttering through her wool" (5) in the first line of the stanza and this suggests that Aunt Jennifer is trying to sew as fast as her fingers will allow. Complex questions arise from this simple description of Aunt Jennifer sewing. Why does she need to create something so fast? Exactly what is she afraid of that would spur her on so? Perhaps her fear is that she will not live long enough to finish the creation. Perhaps she fears she will be interrupted in the middle of her work. She is trying to do it as fast as she can, but then begin the images of weight, of carrying a burden. The fact that the "ivory needle is hard to pull" (6) insinuates that she's been sewing for a long time. In fact, sewing is probably what she does most of the day when she's not caring for her husband. The marriage to the speaker's Uncle is perhaps Aunt Jennifer's greatest weight. After all, "The massive weight of Uncle's wedding band/Sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer's hand" (7-8). This bulk is probably more emotional and mental than physical. It is doubtful that Aunt Jennifer's wedding band itself weighs down her hand so much that she can't sew as fast as she'd like. The weight is probably one in which her marriage didn't turn out as she planned. Perhaps she wanted children and never had any. Certainly no mention is made in the poem of the speaker having cousins. Aunt Jennifer's marriage has most likely turned out to be her biggest disappointment and one that she would probably even like to escape. And for at least a little while escape she does, right into her sewing.

The final stanza argues for the successful grasping of a sense of immortality so eagerly sought by Aunt Jennifer. This final portion of the poem contains imagery that reflects back on the first two stanzas and completes the three-tiered approach to the poem as a consideration of the life-spirit of someone who has not led the life they wanted contrasted with the bid for a satisfactory afterlife. The stanza begins with a look forward to when Aunt Jennifer will no longer be alive and creating her artisticsewing pieces. The first line pointedly shows that Aunt Jennifer had terrified hands which "will lie/Still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by" (9-10). The line clearly harkens back to the second stanza and its dealings with the burdens Aunt Jennifer lives under. What could possibly have terrified her hands? And what ordeals was she mastered by? The most obvious answer is made by connecting the ordeals back with the heavy weight of her wedding band spoken of in the second stanza. Aunt Jennifer is more than likely abused-at least emotionally-by her husband. She is quite literally mastered by her husband. Such is the need for escape into her art. The final two lines of the stanza-and the poem-reflect back on the very opening line. The tigers are still in the panel that she made and they continue to prance, "proud and unafraid (12). The tigers that she fought so hard to create despite the overwhelming burden of her life will, indeed, continue to prance forever. By the end of the poem, Aunt Jennifer has fulfilled her need and achieved her own little sense of immortality. Her life was not in vain, she created something out of nothing, something that will live on well after she is dead and buried.

The structure of the play "Aunt Jennifer's Tigers" is built upon the give and take of showing a woman's ability to create an everlasting work of art while dealing with the abject humiliation of a living a life that is built on worries and woe. In three small stanzas of just four lines each, the poem craftily builds toward the welcome conclusion that no matter how much life has to dish out to a person and bring a person down, each of us can still achieve some small measure of respect and immortality if we just have the discipline to do what we know we can do well. If a person can find out what it is that he does well, he can achieve it and create for himself something that will last long after he have created it. Aunt Jennifer successfully beat back the load that she was forced to carry and created a small wedge of life everlasting for herself.

Keys to Reading a Short Story

The short story is concerned primarily with five elements: plot, setting, character, point of view, and theme. But, unlike a novel, the short story restricts the development of these elements, primarily because its length requires it to do so. Very often, a short story concentrates mostly on character as it reveals theme. 

As you read a short story look for these elements:

Setting: Setting is the time, place, and environment in which the story takes place. Understanding the setting helps the reader to understand the context of the story.

Plot: Plot is the series of events in the story that reveals the conflict(s), crisis (or turning point), and resolution. A good short story has a problem (or conflict) that must be solved. The conflict could be external - a character versus other characters or a character versus nature--or the conflict might be internal, a character versus himself. The turning point is that moment when the direction of the story changes, when the direction of the conflict is altered. The resolution is simply how the conflict turns out. Conflict is critical to a story, as theme most often is related to the conflict and its resolution.

Character: In a short story, the author often only has time to develop one character fully. A character is considered to be a flat character if he/she only has one distinguishing characteristic. The character who is more complicated and multi-dimensional (often referred to as a round character) - the one who appears more "real" - is often the main character of the story. But, to make sure who the main character is, ask "Which character changes the most?" The answer to that question is the main character. We learn about character through what that character says, what others in the story say about him/her, what the narrator says about him/her, and the character's actions.

Point of View:  This is the vantage point from which the story is told. The basic choices available to an author are first person, third person omniscient, third person limited, and third person objective. As a reader, you should ask why the author has chosen a particular point of view.

Theme: The theme is what the author is trying to ask us about the subject of the story. For example, if the subject of the story is "discrimination", the theme might be "Discrimination often causes the loss of self-esteem in those victimized by its oppressive nature".

Monday, January 24, 2011

Keys To Reading Poetry

To increase your understanding and appreciation of a poem, use the following six-step process.

1. Read the poem through entirely without stopping.

As your read through the poem you may feel that you are not understanding it while you read. Such feelings are natural in this case. Do not worry about what you are not understanding. Try to get through the entire poem once in a single reading. Let the punctuation in the lines of the poem guide you in your reading. Do not think because the first word of each line of a poem may be, and usually is, capitalized that each line of the poem is a new thought. If you reach the end of a line and there is no mark of punctuation, keep on reading, beginning the next line as a continuation of the previous line.
2. Read the poem again.
 
3. Look up all unknown words and figurative language.

Use your dictionary, your English book (which will have an index of literary terms in the back of the book), a thesaurus.

4. Read the poem again. (Try reading the poem aloud.)

5. Answer the following questions about the poem:


- Who is the speaker in the poem? The speaker is the voice the reader hears in the poem.

- Who is the speaker addressing? The speaker can address an audience or another being in the poem itself.

- What is the subject of the poem? The subject of a poem is the person, place, or thing about which the speaker is speaking.

- What is the theme of the poem? The theme of the poem is what the poet is asking the reader to think about the subject.

- What is the tone of the poem? The tone of a poem is the attitude of the speaker towards his subject.

6. Read the poem again.

Right! There is no mystery in the method for increasing one's understanding and appreciation of poetry. Read the poem again and again and...

1 - First, read the poem through without stopping.

To An Athlete Dying Young by  A. E. Housman

The time you won your town the race
We chaired you through the market place;
Man and boy stood cheering by,
And home we brought you shoulder high.
Today, the road all runners come,                           5
Shoulder-high we bring you home,
And set you at your threshold down
Townsman of a stiller town.
Smart lad, to slip betimes away
From fields where the glory does not stay,        10
And early though the laurel grows
It withers quicker than the rose.
Eyes the shady night has shut
Cannot see the record cut,
And silence sounds no worse than cheers         15
After earth has stopped the ears;
Now you will not see the rout
Of lads who wore their honors out,
Runners whom renown outran
And the name died before the man.                    20
So set, before its echoes fade,
The fleet foot on the sill of shade,
And hold to the low lintel up
The still-defended challenge-cup.
And round that early-laureled head                   25
Will flock to gaze the strengthless dead,
And find unwithered on its curls
The garland briefer than a girl's.

As a reminder, try to get through the entire poem once in a single reading. Let the punctuation in the lines of the poem guide you in your reading. Do not think because the first word of each line of a poem may be, and usually is, capitalized that each line of the poem is a new thought. If you reach the end of a line and there is no mark of punctuation, keep on reading, beginning the next line as a continuation of the previous line. Look again at the first stanza:

The time you won your town the race           1
We chaired you through the market place;     2
Man and boy stood cheering by,                3
And home we brought you shoulder high.      4

Line two above is a continuation of the thought begun in line one, and the end of line one wraps itself around to the beginning of line two to complete the thought. Lines three and line four work in a similar fashion, with the comma at the end of line three asking the reader to pause slightly before continuing on to finish line four. The semi-colon at the end of line two asks the reader to stop, but it also suggests that the thought of lines one/two are closely related to the thoughts of lines three/four.

2 - Read the poem again.

3 - Look up all unknown words and figurative language.

In red underlined type are words and phrases that you may need to look up or wrestle with to more fully understand them and the poem as a whole. For example, in line two above, the phrase We chaired you could be understood as "We put you in a chair" (raised you up to our shoulders, and paraded you through the center of town (market place) to show everyone that you were victorious in a running race.) The phrase stiller town is a reference to cemetery. The verb stopped means, in this case, filled or closed. As a reader of poetry you should know the language of a poem, both single words, phrase, and figurative language (which would include literary terms). Can you identify or explain the other red underlined words and phrases above?

4 - Read the poem again. (Reading aloud is a way to try to capture the tone of the poem.)

5 - Answer these questions:

Who is the speaker of the poem?
The speaker of this particular poem is a person who knows the athlete and is reflecting on his death. The speaker is not A. E. Housman. Housman is the poet who creates the voice in the poem, much like a writer of fiction creates a narrator for a story. The speaker in Housman's poem could either be a man or a woman, and he or she uses a recurring metaphor or theme of doorway/passage (Note: threshold, sill, shade, lintel) to represent the passage from life into death. The speaker seems to be or to have been intimate with the athlete, perhaps as a parent or friend.

Who is the speaker addressing?
The speaker is addressing the athlete (the "you" of line one), although only in a figurative sense as the boy/man athlete is dead. The reader has a sense that a larger audience, the people of the town, are also being addressed indirectly, listening to the speaker's eulogy of the athlete.

What is the subject of the poem?
The subject of the poem is, in general, death, or the death of a young boy/man and the speaker's eulogy for him. (A eulogy is a tribute to a person, usually one who has died.) We know the dead athlete to be a male because of the speaker's reference to him as lad in line nine.

What is the theme of the poem?
What is the poet trying to ask us about the death of this young athlete? Is the poet suggesting that the athlete is "a smart lad" because life or living is perhaps a worse fate than death? Or, is the poet asking us to think about how fleeting are the victories in life? That the poem can entertain numerous questions suggests the levels of ambiguity present in the poem itself. However, the thematic questions of any poem are always based in the subject and language of the poem itself; in other words, will the language of the poem support your interpretation of it?

What is the tone of the poem?

The speaker's attitude towards the young athlete's death is mournful, as one might suspect in the situation presented in this poem. However, the speaker's tone is also ironic. For example, the speaker calls the athlete smart for having died young to escape the fate of older athletes who can no longer win races. The speaker's use of irony is a way of trying to make sense of "why" an athlete should die young or why anyone, perhaps, should die before having lived a full life. Perhaps the irony conceals bitterness in the speaker for having lost the young athlete.

6 - Read the poem again.
Are you noting new elements of the poem? Structure, rhythm, rhyme scheme, inverted word order, literary elements, and/or punctuation?
Read the poem . . .Let the poem be and come back to it later.