Wednesday, April 30, 2008

"The Chimney Sweep"

Question 1. The little boy's atitude is a positive one. The little boy is showing himself and people around him that this life they live isn't that terrible and they should only look at the positive side rather than the negative. When one of the litte chimney sweepers gets his hair cut off, the boy says, "Hush, Tom! nevermind it, for when your head's bare, You know that the soot cannot spol your white hair." This boy is looking at these horrible events as no big deal, to him it is just something he has to deal with in life that he accepts. The poet's atitude through out this poem is just looking at the negative sides of this story. It is all about, why would a father sell his son? Why does this poor boy have to do a dirty job he doesn't deserve to do? All these questions are implying the hard, difficult life this child lives and how to the poet it is a huge deal, but to this little boy it is nothing.

Monday, April 28, 2008

"Ozymandias"

Ozymandias —
Identify the speaker, was the poet himself, or just an anybody, looking at the world in a different view of most
Identify the situation of occasion
What’s happening: A traveler is telling the speaker about a ruined vase in the desert
When: Any where, probably a deserted place
Where: Around the mid 1800's perhaps around that place in time considering the language and comparisons made by the speaker
The Tone / Purpose: Wise, smartbut sad. Has a old'ish tone to it, as it talks about a vase worn by sand and wind. It’s purpose is that all good things must come to an end, no matter how priceless, powerful, or beautiful.
The author achieves the effect of “insightful sadness” by writing about a potter, Ozymandias, who made a great vase and placed it on a pedestal. Nature ravaged his vase, and all that remains is the pedestal, with a plaque on it.

"Barbie Doll"

The speaker was supposed to portray a girl that was made fun of through out her life. This was until she turned into this beautiful barbie doll that everyone envied and loved. This speaker changed herself to fit other people's wants and desirer. They did not respect what she looked like and made fun of her for it. Then she "cut off" parts of her body because she thought that she didn't look "right", or the way she was supposed too. She was being teased and wasn't being looked at by what some call a "normal girl". This fantasy girl that portrayed the figure none other than a "Barbie Doll".

Thursday, April 24, 2008

"Toads"

#4. The literal term for the second toad, represents the comparison to the speaker. The speaker is going to keep on working instead of speaking his mind and telling his boss what kind of life he want, which includes not working for him. Being the second is the "inner" him that is preventing him to live the life he wants desperately, but will not get or try to get because of the inner self. He talks about the people he would want to be, which are the people the workd very little and have very little, but seem to be much happier than he is.
#5. The speaker is a angry, bitter, and reluctant to pursue the way of life he mentions to crave. This life is to live on less and still be happy, which is the problem with the life he has now. He is upset because he wants to live a happy life and not work as much as he does now. His attitude towards work is annoyed and anger because of the life he desires, but inner self denis to want. This is making him stay in the same mind-set he has been in and not changing his life around according to what he truley wants.

"The Victims"

The Victims in this play, are the children and the wife that is being abused. The line that says "She took it and she took it, in silence, all those years and then." This is showing that she has taken all the beatings from him, when he was completely drunk, and took her beating without any refusal or objection. She said nothing and loved him so much that even the beatings and drunken rampage could not make her break it off with him. Her children were also the other victims in this poem. They are the narrators in the story, explaining how much they wanted their mother to stop this madness and divorce this evil man, their father. In the end she divorces him and he looses everything. When the kids pass the street and find bums, they wait to one day see their father sitting on a side walk begging for money, like their mother once begged for mercy. The victims are the mother and the children of the abusive, distructive, father/husband.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

"To His Coy Mistress"

If you knew how much i loved you, you would pay attenion to what i am trying to say.
But your not listeneing and you won't give me you in the way that want you.
Therefore we won't be able to being together our love to become what I have longed for.

No, I don't think this argument is valid, because you are supposed to love them even when they become old not just when they are young. You are supposed to be with someone forever not just for one night to furfill this fantasy he has been dreaming about. You can't always get what you want, and she is waiting for marriage and doesn't trust him enough to give him herself yet, which he, nor understand, excpets, or likes.

Monday, April 21, 2008

"The Hound"

1. The only word i did not know was equivocal.

2. The speaker is someone that is very confused with this hound. This person or animal does not know whether it will become friends with this dog, or the dog will bite it or tackle it. The line, "Either to rend me. Or to befriend me." Is showing that there is a lot of confusion of where these to figures stand in terms of their relationship. Another line that shows the confusion is, "At my bare hand, With teeth or tounge." It stands there nto knowing what to do until this hound dog makes the first move. The speaker is frightened and nervoulsy awaiting this hounds' first move.

3.The stiuation is nervously awaiting a hound's move to determine a friendship that could end up great or just end.

4. The hound dog is scoping out this figure to tell whether it will attack it or befriend it, the scenary is not specific and when it is happening isn't very specific either.

5. The tone is scared, nervous, fightened, anxious.

6. The phrase, "Life the hound, Equivocal, Comes at a bound." is very confusing. I think it is trying to say that the hound's life is equil to what will happen next in this next period of time. "Meanwhile I stand And wait the event." Meaning this figure is not moving until he/she finds out what will happen with them and this hound dog.

7. The theme of this poem is to show that you can never know who your friends are and sometimes you can make a dissision that determines who your friends are, whether you will attack them as enemies or give the a chance as a friend.

8. The author ahieves this by making the speaker sound pretrified to find out what this hound is going to do. The author makes it so you will be guessing until the end, then they never end up telling you if the hound befriends them or not it is just a mystery until the end.

Bereft

There is the person who is very lonely and fearful. They don't have much time because the seasons are changing almost instantly and fear lies ahead. The fear of fall and being lonley again another season. Implies that fall is something to be afraid of with the line "Change like to a deeper roar." All memories of summer are fading. "Summer was past and day was past." The tone of the poem is anger, frusteration, and some sort of fear. "Something sinister in the tone", is showing that fall is like a sin. This person seems like he has some sort of religous views, because it talks about being "sinister"and the last line in the poem is, "Word I had no one left but God." The speaker could either be outside watching teh mystery of the chaning seasons or inside observing the sunny skies turn grey. It is most like outside though, since in the middle of the poem it states, "Blindly struck at me knees and missed." It is talking about the wind, meaning that it is not fall yet, but the more the wind comes the more summer and the season of happiness and calirity disapeers.

Friday, April 18, 2008

“Out, Out----“

1. There was only one word that I did not recognized, which was Ether.

2. The speaker is this outsider who is watching this little boy do all this work, which he is struggling with. He can barley handle this work load because it is meant for a man not a little child. “ Since he was old enough to know, big boy, doing a man’s work, through a child heart.” The speaker could have been this child’s sister, the one he cries out to when they want to cut off his arm.

3. The situation is that there is this hard working little boy who works all the time and does jobs that are a huge challenge for him. He does them anyway though. Then this doctor comes to their house and wants to cut off his arm. He cries out to his sister to tell her no, but the doctor went through with the pursedure. This ended in the little boy’s death. “No more to build on there.” This means that since the little boy has passed there was going to be no more building, no harder jobs that would be completed.

4. This is happening in the 40’s or 50’s. The three characters are the little boy, who works like an older man, the sister, and the doctor. This is all happening when the little boy is done working (building) and it is placed at his house.

5. The tone is more of a depressing, angry, and very fast paced. They give you very little time to explain the characters and go straight into the death of the little boy. At the beginning everything is pleasant and dandy, but then when the doctor arrives it is as if everything had gone down hill right then and there. Nothing had happened according to plan and in a way the tone was shocking.

6. Important phrases include:
“ That boy counts so much when saved from work.”
“ Doing a man’s work, through a child at heart.”
“ The doctor put him in the dark of ether.”
“ Little less nothing! And that ending it.”
“ No more to build on there.”

7. The theme of this poem is uncertainty is life. That life could end at any minute and that for this little boy it was a terrible loss of talent and potential. He dedicated his life to do a man’s job and was wiped out in return.

8. The Author achieves this by making the boy so irresistible and hard working that when this tragedy happens you feel so sad. You want to ask so many questions because since the author made the little boy such a hard worker and was pushed to grow older made him more of a great kid who didn’t deserve what had happened to him.