Monday, November 26, 2007

Seven Seas of Rhye by Queen

Fear me you lords and lady preachersI descend upon your Earth from the skiesI command your very souls you unbelieversBring before me what is mineThe seven seas of Rhye.

Can you hear me you peers and privy counsellorsI stand before you naked to the eyesI will destroy any man who dares abuse my trustI swear that you'll be mineThe seven seas of Rhye.

Sister - I live and lie for youMister - do and I'll dieYou are mine I possess youI belong to you forever-ever-ever-aah.

Storm the master-marathon I'll fly throughBy flash and thunder-fire andI'll survive - I'll survive - I'll surviveI'll survive - I'll survive - I'll surviveThen I'll defy the laws of nature and come out aliveThen I'll get you.

Be gone with you - you shod and shady senatorsGive out the good, leave out the bad evil criesI challenge the mighty Titan and his troubadoursAnd with a smile.

I'll take you to the seven seas of Rhye- Oh I do like to be beside the seaside- Oh I do like to be beside the sea- Where the brass band plays - tiddly om pom pom- Oh I do like to be beside the seaside- Oh I do like to be beside the sea.

Prompt 2

.Richard Wilbur and Billy Collins both wrote poems about children. Both of them had similarities in their poems but they also had their differences. Each author uses literary devices to make their point.

Richard Wilbur makes the child in his poem a scared little kid. His story is one about a kid who is afraid of an owl. The child is told that the owl is saying, "Who cooks for you". This makes the kid better for he is no longer afraid. His parents had solved the problem and helped the scared kid go to sleep.

Billy Collins writes a similar but different story from A Barred Owl. His story is about a history teacher who tells kids lies because he does not think that the kids can take the truth. The child in Richard Wilbur's is an innocent child but this is not so in Collins' story. At the end the children bully other kids despite the happy stories the teacher tells them.

There is a strong connection between these two books as well. They are both about kids and how we lie to them. In Wilbur's story we lie to them to soothe their fears. In Collins' story we lie to them so that they do not hear such wretched stories as The War of The Roses.

All in all, these two stories are two different stories but are very much alike. Both tell kids lies for what we think is a good reason. In Wilbur's story the lie does some good, but in Collin's story the lies do the kids no good at all.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Prompt

The Metamorphosis uses symbols to make the book more meaningful. Franz Kafka was a writer who loved to use symbols. The symbols are important to this particular book. The whole book is a bunch of symbols used to teach us a lesson.

A symbol that was used was Gregor's room. Gregor was trapped in his small room, almost as if it were a prison. As a bug he stays in his room so that nobody sees him. In this sense it is not just a prison but a safe haven as well.

Another symbol in Metamorphosis is Gregor's furniture. Even though Gregor can not use his furniture anymore he is still attached to it. When his mother and sister take his furniture away he feels like his room is empty. His furniture was something dear to him and it was taken away from him.

Gregor's father is another symbol in the book. He is the authority in this book. If he thinks Gregor is out of line he will make him pay. He is also the one who decides what happens to Gregor since he is the leader of the household. The father ultimately runs the show.

All in all, there are many symbols in Metamorphosis. Each one has its own meaning and adds to the book significantly. Franz Kafka's use of symbols gives the book a deeper meaning then what you see at first. If you read the book more than once you begin to see different things that you would not have seen the first time.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

A Hunger Artist

Why are there hunger artists?

What is the significance of 40 days?

How does this man live for 40 days without food?

How many hunger artists are there?

Why is this man in a cage if he clearly has no desire to eat?

The hunger artist use to be a huge thing. People would come during all parts of the day to see the hunger artist. The whole city viewed him at some point in the day. The man could eat nothing except for a little water he used to moisten his lips. There were people appointed to make sure that the man ate nothing, even though this was completley unecesary. He had no desire to eat anything. This gave the people some relief because they knew this way that the man was not cheating.

The hunger artist was the only one that could truly admire what he did though. Everybody else had no idea wether he had really gone for forty days except for the hunger artist himself because nobody had the time to watch him day in and day out. Of course the hunger artist was the only one who knew how easy it was though. He did try to tell people it was easy but nobody believed him.

When forty days had gone by the impresario ended the fast. A large celebration took place for the hunger artist. The cage he was kept in was opened and music blaired as two women took him out of his cage to a table with food on it. The hunger artist did not want the food though. He wanted to go longer and become the greatest hunger artist ever, but the impresario forced the food into his mouth and evrybody took a toast.

The hunger artist lived on fasting while taking short breaks between fasts. He did this because he wanted to. He was too old to change professions anyway. Eventualy he joined a circus where he was once again put in a cage for peole to watch him. At first people would come to look at him but after a while nobody paid attention to him. It was well over forty days but nobody knew exactly how many because nobody took track, not even the hunger artist. Nobody really cared for him. The Cage and everything around it was untouched and pooorly maintained. People began to forget he was even there until a supervisor found him. The supervisor asked the hunger artist if he was still alive and he said yes and told him not to admire him because he had to fast since he did not like any food. that is when he died and was replaced by a panther who brought lots of spectators.

Monday, November 5, 2007

Writing Prompt

In Brave New World Bernard Marx is a man who, in his head, is pulled in conflicting directions. He is trained to be part of a united people but he feels like an individual. Bernard is often looked down on by others because he is different but he can not help the way he is.

The first of the two sides of the conflict in his head is unity. The world he lives in is all about unity. Bernard could give in to this and be happy, at least on the outside. On the inside he would be discontent because he is an individual who is not like the others. For all the soma and fellgoods in the world he would never feel the same as everbody else; he would never be truly happy, but he wants to be happy so he wants to be part of the crowd.

The other sidde of this conflict is to be an individual. He can think for himself and do whatever pleases him instead of whatever everybody else is doing. This way deffenitley suites him better. From birth he was always different. He is not the same physically or mentally. He would be better of being an individual.

This conflict within Bernard's head is of large significance to the book. The main theme of the book is individuality versus unity. Bernard's conflict allows us to decide which we think is better. It gives us an example to use when we think about which is better.

All in all, Bernard is a large part of Brave New World. His conflict between individuality and unity contributes a lot to the meaning of the book. In the end Bernard chooses individuality because he does not fit in with everbody else. Happiness and unity is not for everone.