Love's Philosophy - P.B. Shelly

2013/06/09

The fountains mingle with the river,
And the rivers with the ocean;
The winds of heaven mix forever
With a sweet emotion;
Nothing in the world is single;
All things by a law divine
In another's being mingle--
Why not I with thine?

See, the mountains kiss high heaven,
And the waves clasp one another;
No sister flower could be forgiven
If it disdained its brother;
And the sunlight clasps the earth,
And the moonbeams kiss the sea;--
What are all these kissings worth,
If thou kiss not me? 

POETIC/LITERARY DEVICES
1.      Personification
·         Fountains mingle with the river
·         Winds of heaven mix forever with a sweet emotion
·         The mountains kiss high heaven
·         The waves clasps one another
·         Moonbeams kiss the sea
2.      Metaphors
·         No sister flower could be forgiven if it disdained its brother- it describes that no man should go against one another for a brother will look on to another brother.
3.      Rhetorical question
·         If thou kiss not me?- simply says that what is the use of all the relationships in the nature worth if you’re not with me (a man and woman’s relationship)

STANZA BY STANZA ANALYSIS
STANZA 1: P. B. Shelly expresses that everything in the nature are in union. “The fountains mingle with the river and the rivers with the ocean”. He wants to have an intimate relationship with the girl. He claims that the world is held by a “law divine” so nothing in the world is single. He’s advocating his intention on having a relationship with her.
STANZA 2: The mountains are touching high heaven and the waves clasps one another. He means that every nature is embracing each other. No man can be forgiven if he hates another man. He’s proposing that all men should be in a good term with each other. He said that what is the use of nature embracing each other if you(lover) don’t reciprocate my love?


CRITICAL APPRECIATION
What the author is trying to imply is that love is in vain if it’s a ‘one-sided’ love. Love is interdependent. There is also a message that the natural world is on the side of love. The thing that Shelly was stressing on was that love and everything about and in it is sweet. But if it’s only a one-sided love or affection, then it would be all worthless. Shelly uses nature mingling with each other (divine thing) to press on that a man and woman should be together, that nature and man are destined to have a pair.

READING MATERIAL
This is a simple little love poem in two 8-line stanzas with an ABABCDCD rhyme scheme. It is, at heart, a plea for his girlfriend to kiss him, but his persuasion takes the form of pointing to a range of natural and cosmic conjunctions that involve, on a "macro" scale, what he wishes to do on a "micro" one. The first stanza begins:
The fountains mingle with the river,
And the rivers with the ocean;
The winds of heaven mix forever
With a sweet emotion;
The logic points, in his view, to the inevitability of mingling and mixing "by a law divine" which applies to what his girlfriend should do as well, because "Nothing in the world is single".
The second stanza is, in effect, a repetition of the first, although here "mingle" and "mix" are replaced by "kiss" and "clasp" as the keywords. It should also be noted that the examples move up a gear from rivers and winds to sunlight and moonlight in the lines:
And the sunlight clasps the earth,
And the moonbeams kiss the sea;-
Shelley does not mince his words when he relates mountains kissing the sky and moonbeams kissing the sea directly to his personal circumstances in the final lines:
What are all these kissings worth,
If thou kiss not me? 
As a "philosophy", Shelley's poem might lack something in terms of its rigour, especially as his argument from the universal to the specific is logically unsound, but that does not matter when the poem is considered for what it is, namely a cleverly constructed love poem that is typical of its kind in that the lover's regard of the universe is entirely coloured by his emotions. He can see nothing around him that does not back up his argument and ignores everything that does not, of which there would be plenty of examples if he chose to look for them.
There is also the message that the natural world is on the side of love, which is true in a sense but not quite the one that Shelley is stressing here. For him, the mingling, clasping and kissing is "sweet work" that would be worthless if his girlfriend does not succumb to him. This is, of course, an absurd position to take but it is again typical of someone who is deeply in love and single-minded in their quest.
This short poem throws so many examples at the reader that he or she might almost be taken in by its faulty logic. If the reader is in the throes of love themselves, they might indeed accept the argument. This is, after all, "Love's Philosophy", which does not have to follow the rules that apply in all other circumstances. 


BIBLIOGRAPHY

MALAYSIAN SHORT STORY Pasang - Pretam Kaur

2013/06/08

This is a short recap of the story Pasang by Pretam Kaur:-

Introduction
1. Chranpal begs his mother for money to buy a top but he failed
2. Talks about the village boys; Ramasamy, Kanda and Ali. The way the game is played is futher elaborated

Rising Action
1. Chranpal bought a top after begging his father for money
2. He customises the top (drove a thumb-tack right into the uppermost point of the top)
3. Chranpal joins the village boys to play. After a while, Chranpal's mother called him home but he continued playing.

Climax
Ramasamy aimed and swung his top towards Chranpal's. Chranpal's new top broke.

Falling Action
1. His heart broke when he saw the broken top as the boys praised Ramasamy for his cleverness. Ramasamy apologised to Chranpal.

Resolution
Chranpal walks away in regret, disappoinment and anger that his top is broken. He thinks about how lonely he would be during the long top season without his top.


Theme
Perceptions of children in a multicultural environment

Sub theme
Culture of games; Peer pressure


Settings
Place kitchen of Chranpal's house | Malay shop that sells top | on the narrow road
Time ► Hot sunny day | in the 80's
Community ► A multicultural community | A community that stresses on education


Main events
o Chranpal wants to buy a top, mother doesn't allow him
o His father gave him 10 cents to buy a top after he promised to study
o He remodelled and decorated his top
o The intense fight between Chranpal and the boys. He tries to back away, but the others forced him to end his game although his mother called for him
o His top broke into two halves when Rama's top hit Chranpal's


Characteristics


A Poison Tree - William Blake

2013/06/07

I was angry with my friend;
I told my wrath, my wrath did end.
I was angry with my foe:
I told it not, my wrath did grow.

And I watered it in fears,
Night & morning with my tears:
And I sunned it with smiles,
And with soft deceitful wiles.

And it grew both day and night.
Till it bore an apple bright.
And my foe beheld it shine,
And he knew that it was mine.

And into my garden stole,
When the night had veiled the pole;
In the morning glad I see;
My foe outstretched beneath the tree.


MEANING OF DIFFICULT WORDS
1.      Wrath - strong, stern, or fierce anger; deeply resentful indignation; ire.
2.      Deceit – distortion of the truth for the purpose of misleading; duplicity; fraud; cheating
3.      Wiles – Trick, trap
4.      Veiled – conceal, lacking clarity or distinctness

POETIC/LITERARY DEVICES
1.      Personification 
-       Waters the wrath with fear
-        I told my wrath, my wrath did end

2.      Metaphor 
-The tree is considered as a wrath/anger
-"Till it bore an apple bright", the apple is a metaphor for the "fruit" of his grudge.

3.      Alliteration 
-sunned and smiles
-friend and foe
-bore and bright

4.      Imagery
- Throughout the poem

5.      Irony
-the foe beneath the tree of hatred

6.      Repitition
-“I was angry with my friend… I was angry with my foe”

7.      Allusion
-"Garden.. apple...tree" alludes to Adam & Eve, the Garden of Eden.


STANZA BY STANZA ANALYSIS
Stanza 1: William Blake speaks of someone, his friend and his foe, whom has he is angry with. When he says ‘I told my wrath, my wrath did end’ after he said he was angry with his friend, he is saying he was able to get over being angry with his friend and forgot about it. Although, it is quite the opposite when he mentions’ I told it not, and my wrath did grow’. Blake is saying that with his enemy, he allowed himself to get angry, and therefore, his wrath did grow.

Stanza 2: In this stanza, Blake begins to make his anger grow and he takes pleasure in it, comparing his anger with something, in this case, a tree or plant. The speaker says he ‘sunned it with smiles’ and ‘and with soft, deceitful wiles’. This means he is creating an illusion with his enemy saying he is pretending to be friendly to seduce and bring him closer.

Stanza 3: ‘And it grew both day and night’ and ‘til it bore an apple bright’ are meaning that his illusion with his enemy is growing and growing until it became a strong and tempting thing. His illusion has a metaphor and it is an apple. After, his foe believes it shines, which means he thinks it’s true and means something, and takes Blake illusion seriously. ‘And he knew it was mine’ suggests that he really thinks Blake is his friend.

Stanza 4: Being the last stanza, Blake needed to come up with a conclusion. He has used the two lines ‘in the morning glad I see’ and ‘my foe outstretched beneath the tree’ to say that his foe finally fell to his tempting illusion and metaphorically, consumed his poison apple and died. So, obviously, his malicious intentions were hidden behind illusion and he prevailed over his enemy.

CRITICAL APPRECIATION
In the first stanza, the consequence of allowing anger to continue instead of stopping it as it begins is shown. This consequence is simply that it will continue to grow. However, as the poem progresses, it is seen that this continued growth of anger can yield harmful results as the enemy, or foe, is lured toward the tree and eats of its fruit, the poison apple. This kills his foe, as he is seen outstretched beneath the tree, a sight the speaker is glad to see the next morning. These final two lines explain one of the main themes of the poem, which is that anger leads to self-destruction. The speaker’s anger grows and eventually becomes so powerful that it has changes from simple anger with another person, to desire to see them dead. One of the subjects of Blake’s work was the underworld, or Hell, and knowing this, it can be seen that the destruction which results from anger is not physical, but spiritual. In addition, the death of the foe, which the speaker is glad to see, does not spiritually affect the foe as the speaker is affected, but only physically harms the foe.


READING MATERIAL
Interpretation and Symbolism
After reading such an amoral poem, the search for hope or alternate meaning begins. A metaphor lives inside the poem, but instead of making the poem less wicked, the analogy confuses and questions faith.
Symbolically, the speaker represents God, the foe and garden represent Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, and the tree represents the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil in Genesis. If this analogy is true, it shows God rejoicing in killing his enemies, which most people think the God they know would never do.
Blake’s poem is peculiar even for today’s standards, and his analogy may be ruthless and insensitive, but he does get the reader thinking. By looking further into the poem, we find that the speaker nourishes and feeds his wrath, which symbolically is the tree from the Garden of Eden. Is Blake suggesting that God fed his wrath and anger into the tree and intended for man to eat from it? If so, He is creating a world doomed to His wrath and anger, an idea just about anybody would shutter at.

Note:
William Blake was an English Dissenter and Dissenter members broke away from the Anglican Church. Dissenters believed that the policies of the Anglican Church were wrong and so opposed it. Blake began writing a collection of poems called Songs of Experience to protest the Anglican Church's policy of stifling "sinful" emotions in people, such as anger. A Poison Tree is a good example of this because it shows how Blake believed that stifling anger would only cause the anger to grow. In fact, Blake even decided to call the original draft of a Poison Tree, "Christian Forebearance." However, the English government did not tolerate the radical actions of the English Dissenters and they persecuted them.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

MALAYSIAN SHORT STORY A Certain Cry - Cynthia Anthony

2013/06/05

A Certain Cry written by Cynthia Anthony is a story of two man hunting for frogs, mainly to highlight on the traditions of rural folks.

THEMES
Customary life of rural folks [customs and traditions]
Sub themes
Preserving the tradition

SETTINGS
·         Place
1.      government quarters

·         Time
1.      dawn and night
2.      In November

·         Community
1.      Rural/customary community


MAIN EVENTS

CHARACTERISATION
CHARACTER
CHARACTERISTICS AND TEXTUAL EVIDENCE
Mick
·         Barbaric and merciless. He would bash the frogs’ head on the concrete and open their underside
·         Good frog hunter. He simply grabbed the frogs and he managed to catch it
·         Impatient as he waits for Jiga to return

Mick’s father
Believes in rituals. Like the sadistic manner of animal slaughter. He thinks that “it is all right because it is our way”

Jiga
·         Merciful. Jiga released the baby frogs back to where they came from
·         Selfless. He saves the author from drowning

Author/ narrator
Good cook. He took over the cooking of frogs. He’s a better cook than Jiga and Mike