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Thursday 4 February 2016

Robert Frost's poetry

Frost's poetry

Robert Frost is very leading figure in American Literature. He has written many beautiful poems like "Home Burial", "Mending wall", "Stopping by woods on a snowy evening", "Fire and Ice", "Design", "The Gift Outright". 


Robert Frost's nature is quite opposite to the nature of Wordsworth. Effect of Darwin is clearly seen in his poem. Nature is not life giving but its destructive.


Fire and Ice

BY ROBERT FROST



Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what Ive tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But if it had to perish twice,
I think I know enough of hate
To say that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.


This short poem outlines the familiar question about the fate of the world, wondering if it is more likely to be destroyed by fire or ice. People are on both sides of the debate, and Frost introduces the narrator to provide his personal take on the question of the end of the world. The narrator first concludes that the world must end in fire after considering his personal experience with desire and passion, the emotions of fire. Yet, after considering his experience with ice, or hatred, the narrator acknowledges that ice would be equally destructive.

Interestingly, the two possibilities for the worlds destruction correspond directly to a
common scientific debate during the time Frost wrote the poem. Some scientists believed that the world would be incinerated from its fiery core, while others were convinced that a coming ice age would destroy all living things on the earths surface. Instead of maintaining a strictly scientific perspective on this debate, Frost introduces a more emotional side, associating passionate desire with fire and hatred with ice. Within this metaphorical view of the two elements, the world can be recognized as a metaphor for a relationship. Too much fire and passion can quickly consume a relationship, while cold indifference and hate can be equally destructive.








Mending Wall:-   Robert Frost


Something there is that doesn't love a
wall,
That sends the frozen-ground-swell
under it,
And spills the upper boulders in the sun;
And makes gaps even two can pass
abreast.
The work of hunters is another thing:
I have come after them and made repair
Where they have left not one stone on a
stone,
But they would have the rabbit out of
hiding,
To please the yelping dogs.  The gaps I
mean,
No one has seen them made or heard
them made,
But at spring mending-time we find them
there.
I let my neighbor know beyond the hill;
And on a day we meet to walk the line
And set the wall between us once again.
We keep the wall between us as we go.
To each the boulders that have fallen to
each.
And some are loaves and some so nearly
balls
We have to use a spell to make them
balance:
'Stay where you are until our backs are
turned!'
We wear our fingers rough with handling
them.
Oh, just another kind of outdoor game,
One on a side.  It comes to little more:
There where it is we do not need the wall:
He is all pine and I am apple orchard.
My apple trees will never get across
And eat the cones under his pines, I tell
him.
He only says, 'Good fences make good
neighbors.'
Spring is the mischief in me, and I
wonder
If I could put a notion in his head:
' Why do they make good neighbors?
Isn't it
Where there are cows?  But here there
are no cows.
Before I built a wall I'd ask to know
What I was walling in or walling out,
And to whom I was like to give offense.
Something there is that doesn't love a
wall,
That wants it down.'  I could say 'Elves'
to him,
But it's not elves exactly, and I'd rather
He said it for himself.  I see him there
Bringing a stone grasped firmly by the top
In each hand, like an old-stone savage
armed.
He moves in darkness as it seems to me,
Not of woods only and the shade of trees.
He will not go behind his father's saying,
And he likes having thought of it so well
He says again, 'Good fences make good
neighbors.'




Mending Wall' opens with a speaker explaining that his property is separated from his neighbor's by a stone wall that is constantly being dismantled by 'something that doesn't love a wall.' Just what this something is that disrupts the wall remains somewhat vague, but the speaker illustrates that it cannot be animals or hunters. The task of mending the wall is difficult, and because nothing in their respective properties poses a threat to the others, the speaker tries to convince his neighbor that there is no need to continue to fix the wall.


The neighbor, however, is unconvinced by the speaker's reasoning and in response, simply utters his father's saying that 'good fences make good neighbors.' The speaker again presses his neighbor, pointing out that rational people should know exactly what they are keeping in and keeping out when they build a wall, yet again the neighbor resists the speaker's reasoning. The poem ultimately ends symbolically with the neighbor's repetition of the adage that 'good fences make good neighbors.'


One of the central themes of this poem is the difficulty of changing social conventions and traditions. The wall can be seen to symbolize an activity that is unquestionably undertaken, and the neighbor's unsatisfying response to the speaker's logic illustrates how stubborn people are to challenge these activities. Moreover, not only does the neighbor have no convincing reason for maintaining the wall, the wall actually separates the speaker from his neighbor by keeping them on opposite sides of the wall. In this sense, the poem isn't merely stating that outdated traditions are difficult to change, but that these traditions can actually get in the way of humans coming.


Mending Wall is about two kinds of barriers physical and emotional. More subtly, the poem explores an ironic underlying question: Is the speakers attitude toward those two kinds of walls any more enlightened than the neighbors?
Each character has a line summing up his philosophy about walls that is repeated in the poem. The speaker proclaims, Something there is that doesnt love a wall. He wants to believe that there is a something, a conscious force or entity in nature, that deliberately breaks down the stone wall on his property. He also wants to believe that a similar something exists in human nature, and he sees the spring season both as the source of the ground swells that unsettle the stone wall and as the justification for the mischief in me that he hopes will enable him to unsettle his neighbors stolid, stone like personality. From the speakers perspective, however, when the neighbor shies away from discussing whether they need the wall, the speaker then sees him as a menacing savage, moving in moral darkness, who.mindlessly repeats the cliché Good fences make good neighbors.


The speaker does not seem to realize that he is just as ominously territorial and walled in as his neighbor, if not more so. The speaker scorns the neighbor for repeating his maxim about good fences and for being unwilling to go behind and question it, yet the speaker also clings to a formulation that he repeats (Something there is.that doesnt love a wall) and seems unwilling to think clearly about his belief in it. For example, the speaker celebrates the way that spring ground swells topple sections of the stone wall. Why, then, does he resent the destruction that the hunters bring to it, and why does he bother to repair those man-made gaps? Similarly, if the speaker truly believes that there is no need for the wall, why is it he who contacts his neighbor and initiates the joint rebuilding effort each spring? Finally, if the speaker is sincerely committed to the something in human nature that doesnt love emotional barriers (and that, by implication, does love human connectedness), why does he allow his imagination to intensify the menacing otherness of his neighbor to the point of seeing him as an old-stone savage armed who moves in darkness? To consider these questions, the speaker would have to realize that there is something in him that does love walls, but the walls within him seem to block understanding of his own contradictory nature. Frost ends the poem with the neighbors line, Good fences make good neighbors.



★★Design


Perhaps echoing the words of Hamlet, "Nothing
is either good or bad, but thinking makes it so,
Frost's superbly constructed sonnet, "Design,"
underscores the observation that perception
often determines reality for an individual as a
theme.
While at first the Italian sonnet of Frost, in its
light tone of near cajolery in its observation of
nature, suggests the poetry of the Romantics,
the poem moves to a Dark Romantic's
metaphysical wrestling worthy of Melville's Ahab
with its debate upon the goodness or evil of
white. Then, too, there is the overtone of the New
England Puritan in the consideration of a
universe "designed" with the moth, the spider,
and the flower all being white.


Home Burial


In this narrative poem, Frost describes a tense conversation between a rural husband and wife whose child has recently died. As the poem opens, the wife is standing at the top of a staircase looking at her childs grave through the window. Her husband, at the bottom of the stairs, does not understand what she is looking at or why she has suddenly become so distressed. The wife resents her husbands obliviousness and attempts to leave the house. The husband begs her to stay and talk to him about her grief; he does not understand why she is angry with him for manifesting his grief in a different way. Inconsolable, the wife lashes out at him, convinced of his apathy toward their dead child. The husband mildly accepts her anger, but the rift between them remains. She leaves the house as he angrily threatens to drag her back by force.

The poem describes two tragedies: first, the death of a young child, and second, the death of a marriage. As such, the title Home Burial, can be read as a tragic double entendre. Although the death of the child is the catalyst of the couples problems, the larger conflict that destroys the marriage is the couples inability to communicate with one another. Both characters feel grief at the loss of the child, but neither is able to understand the way that their partner chooses to express their sorrow.

Frankenstein

Frankenstein




Frankenstein is a science fiction novel by Mary Shelley. Novel is also full of Gothic elements.
It is about eccentric scientist Victor Frankenstein, who joines the different body parts of the corpses and creates a Monster. Horrified by the uglinesss of Monster, Victor leaves him. Later on Monster takes revenge and kills all the near and dear  of Victor.


Entire novel is written in epistolary form. Captain Waldon writes a letter from ship to her sister.Captain was sailing deep into Northern side. There he saw a strange creature. Then they rescue a man- named Victor, who tells his own story to Waldon.

It seems that momster is a devil- who is responsible for the ruin of Victor. But Mary Shelley has given beautiful lines to the Monster also. when we read Monster's narrative it creates sympathy for him.



Reading books like this gives understanding of the fact that there is no totality of truth or Right and wrong. everything depends on perspective. we are generally habituated to look from self centred point of view. we may be right from our point of view. But at the same time if we change the perspective other is also right. in real life we need to give scope to other to present themselves.

Dr. Faustus

Dr. Faustus

Christopher Marlowe's heroes are always hungry for more. The same case is with Dr. Faustus also. Marlowe has brilliantly captured the spirit of Renaissance. It was a time when science was becoming dominant than religion.

Dr. Faustus was a scholar from University of Wittenberg. He has acquired all the knowledge available at that time-History, philosophy, medicine, economy, medicine and many more..... but Still HE WAS HUNGRY FOR MORE KNOWLEDGE.
so, he makes contract with Mephistophilis that he will give his soul to Devil after four and twenty years if Devil gives him power. After getting the power he misuses it, plays silly tricks with it.

At last he suffers, regrets and dies a tragic death.



Click on the link to read more...http://nimeshdave22.blogspot.in/2016/02/dr-faustus-by-christopher-marlowe-as.html

TUGHLAQ by Girish Karnad


  • "TUGHLAQ"
 by Girish Karnad






I was reading two books at a time. Moby Dick- a novel by Herman Melville and Tughlaq- a play by Girish Karnad.
But truly speaking, for me Tughlaq was a love to read kind of  to read. 

But theneven i remember few things like Tughlaq changed capital from Delhi to Daultabad, and from there again to Delhi.
Tughlaq written by Girish Karnad in 1964, is his best loved play, about an idealist 14th-century Sultan of Delhi, Muhammad bin Tughluq, and allegory on the Nehruvian era which started with ambitious idealism and ended up in disillusionment.
Karnad shows the evolution of Tughlaq from an idealist to a tyrant lusty for power and fame, something anyone, any Indian for that matter can relate to easily especially people who are familiar with the Nehruvian Era of Indian politics.


Girish Karnad's play Tughlaq explores the character of one of the most fascinating kings to occupy the throne in Delhi, namely, Mohammed-bin-Tughlaq. He ruled for 26 years, a period of unparalleled cruelty and agonising existence for his subjects.
He's fascinating because though he was one of the most learned monarchs of Delhi, and had great ideas and a grand vision, his reign was also an abject failure. He started his rule with great ideals — of a unified India, of Hindus and Muslims being equal in the eyes of the state (he abolished the onerous tax Jaziya on the Hindus) and the Sultan being the first among equals.
He understood the value of money as not deriving from its intrinsic worth but from the promise behind it: and introduced copper coins. Yet in 20 years his reign had degenerated into an anarchy and his kingdom had become a "kitchen of death". Girish Karnad's play explores why this happened.
The play was immensely popular at the time it was produced (1964). India had, within the same span of nearly 20 years (a mere coincidence?), descended from a state of idealism to disillusionment and cynicism, and hence the play found a chord that resonated in the minds of many people at that time. The issues posed by the play remain relevant even today, not only in a political sense, but also for organisations. 
The play recaptures the significant events starting shortly after Tughlaq's ascension to the throne: his proclamations of idealism, his calling upon his people to be a part of the building of a new empire, of prosperity, peace and amity.
But he ascended the throne by dubious means — killing his father and brother during prayer time, though no one was sure. This led to a lack of credibility among his followers from the time he ascended the throne — no one believed what he professed.
The play outlines his clever plots to eliminate his opponents and his surviving an assassination attempt by his own courtiers. This was a turning point in his life: he decided to shift his capital from Delhi to Daulatabad, ordered every single subject to move from Delhi, banned prayer altogether, and imposed unspeakable cruelties on his subjects.
The miseries of the people during the journey, the corruption that was huge and endemic, and Tughlaq's progressive alienation and isolation from his people are dramatically portrayed. The play ends with scenes of utter chaos and misery in the kingdom, and Tughlaq being left alone, having been abandoned by those who survived him, that is.


Work Cited:-
http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2004-11-05/news/27379866_1_mohammed-bin-tughlaq-play-tughlaq-girish-karnad 

The Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad

The Heart of Darkness


Joseph Conrad has presented very dark picture of Africa in The Heart of Darkness.

Heart of Darkness (1899) is a novella  by novelist Joseph Conrad , about a
voyage up the Congo River into the Congo Free State , in the heart of Africa. Narrator of the story is Marlow. Marlow tells his story to friends aboard a boat anchored on the River Thames, London, England.

This setting provides the frame for Marlow's story of his obsession with the ivory trader Kurtz , which enables Conrad to create a parallel between London and Africa as places of darkness. Central to Conrad's work is the idea that there is little difference between so-called civilised people and those described as savages; Heart of Darkness raises important questions about imperialism and racism.

 In 1998, the Modern Library
ranked Heart of Darkness as the sixty-
seventh of the hundred best novels in English
of the twentieth century.

Criticism :-

Heart of Darkness is criticized in postcolonial studies, particularly by Nigerian novelist
Chinua Achebe , who is considered to be "patriarch of the African Novel". 

In his 1975 public lecture "An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad's Heart of Darkness", Achebe described Conrad's novella as "an
offensive and deplorable book" that de- humanized Africans.  Achebe argued that Conrad, "blinkered...with xenophobia", incorrectly depicted Africa as the antithesis of Europe and civilisation, ignoring the artistic accomplishments of the Fang people who lived in the Congo River basin at the time of the books publication. Since the book promoted and continues to promote a prejudiced image of Africa that "depersonalizes a portion of the human race," he concluded that it should not be considered a great work of art.  Zimbabwean Professor Dr. Rino Zhuwarara broadly agreed with Achebe, though considered it important to be "sensitized to how peoples of other nations perceive Africa."


 In 2003, Botswanan professor Dr. Peter Mwikisa concluded the book was
"the great lost opportunity to depict dialogue between Africa and Europe." In 1983,British Professor Cedric Watts published an essay expressing indignation at his perceived implication of Achebe's criticism: that only black people may accurately analyse and assess the novella. Stan Galloway writes, in a comparison of Heart of Darkness with Jungle Tales of Tarzan , "The inhabitants [of both works], whether antagonists or compatriots, were clearly imaginary and meant to represent a particular fictive cipher and not a particular African people."  Fellow novelist Caryl Phillips stated after a

2003 interview that "Achebe is right; to the African reader the price of Conrad's eloquent denunciation of colonization is the recycling of racist notions of the 'dark' continent and her people. Those of us who are not from Africa may be prepared to pay this price, but this price is far too high for Achebe." 


work cited:-

Wikipedia contributors. "Heart of Darkness." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 20 Feb. 2016. Web. 26 Feb. 2016.

THE HAIRY APE by Eugene O'Neill.

THE HAIRY APE


The Hairy Ape



The Hairy Ape is a love to read kind of play by American Shakespeare Eugene O'Neill.
Because of its lively imagery and lucid, simple language it looks as if things are happening in front of our eyes.
The Hairy Ape (1922) is an expressionist play by Eugene O'Neill about a brutish, unthinking laborer known as Yank as he searches for a sense of belonging in a world controlled by the rich. At first Yank feels secure as he stokes the engines of an oceanliner, and is highly confident in his physical power over the ship's engines.
However, when the weak but rich daughter of an industrialist in the steel business refers to him as a "filthy beast," Yank undergoes a crisis of identity. He leaves the ship and wanders into Manhattan, only to find he does not belong anywhere—neither with the socialites on Fifth Avenue, nor with the labor organizers on the waterfront.

The worst condition of Yank, Paddy and other characters makes us as a reader sensitive towards them. And the way they are looked and treated by rich people/ owner of industries is terrible. Rich people's sophistication and mannerisms looks artificial and stupid. Actually they are responsible for poor condition of working class people.
Mildred Doughlas considers herself as a waste product of her father's company. When she comes down & saw Yank, Paddy and other workers working, she fainted down. She calls Yank a Hairy Ape.


Characters go on drinking and singing "Home is hell" shows their mentality and condition. Workers are uprooted in this industrialised era. All the profit earn by owners and lives a grand life. There is one scene in which Yank was shouting and other people coming out of church, did not paying attention to him !!!
The Hairy Ape displays O'Neill's social concern for the oppressed industrial working class. Despite demonstrating in The Hairy Ape his clear belief that the capitalistsystem persecutes the working man, O'Neill is critical of a socialist movement that can't fulfill individual needs or solve unique problems.
The industrial environment is presented as toxic and dehumanizing; the world of the rich, superficial and dehumanized. Yank has also been interpreted as representative of the human condition, alienated from nature by his isolated consciousness, unable to find belonging in any social group or environment.

THE BLUEST EYE by Toni Morrison

SEIS LIBROS QUE NUNCA IMAGINARÍAS QUE ESTUVIERON PROHIBIDOS |


  • THE BLUEST EYE


Toni Morrison
.
Novel by Toni Morrison, is about a Black girl Pecola's DESIRE for the Blue eye. The novel beautifully talks about how black people were suffering in America. Reading text like this gives understanding that one should not do like that with others. Humanity is more important than caste, religion or race





















Presentation "The Bluest Eye written by Toni Morrison powerpoint by ...




The treatment of Pecola and her mother in the novel is painful.And more disturbing thing is that Pecola- a little girl is raped and made pregnant by her own father.



toni morrison
In the beginning of the novel season Autumn is described. It is a season of fall. trees looses its leaves, symbolically it suggests Pecola's loosing her own child.


Then Morrison also gives description that how she was teased by other friends. Her father used to bit her mother.


Pecola's mother was working in a house of a white man. If we apply concept of Frantz Fanon discussed in "Black skin White Masks", then we can understand the psyche of black people. They wanted to become white. They desired whiteness, which is not possible at all. Being black people they wanted to enter into the white world. That's why Pecola's mother was working into the white people's house. It was considered that White is virtue and Black is evil. The rumors were spread about black that they are violent, cruel and barbaric.

so, Black writer writes back to whatever written by white masters.






Double marginalization:-



Pecola and his mother both are double marginalized. First by the white people, and second into Patriarchal structure by male members. Their suffering is the suffering of the majority of people.

OTHELLO

OTHELLO


Tragedy of Othello oleh William Shakespeare
Its really great to study  tragedy of William Shakespeare. After studying the text i realised that why Shakespeare is one of the greatest dramatist of the world. Its because the uniqueness of his plays. Theme, characterization, plot, Psychological depth of the play is unique.


William Shakespeare's Othello product details page
Hamlet is a man of thinking, where as Othello is a man of action. Thinking and thinking and never putting into action, and action without thinking - two opposite things created in two different play by same dramatist is mark of genius ness and also is the soul of the play.
Reading texts like this makes us aware that excessiveness of anything is dangerous.
and reading literature also gives us understanding of past. What kind of society it was? To study plays like this gives aesthetic delight.



... , Farewell! Othello's occupation's gone! - William Shakespeare

Othello was a black Moor, but was on very high position in Army. many people disliked this. and Being a black man he gets a white girl Desdemona, which dont like to white people. So, Iago- a villainous character plays a trick and creates misunderstanding for Ophelia by putting handkerchief, which plays vital role in murder of Ophelia. And because of this mistake Othello also dies. Thus it is a tragedy of man of action.
.Special] Othello von William Shakespeare

NITISHATAKAM


Image result for Nitishatakam
Nitishatakam is written by Bhartuhari. About author's biography there is no factual evidences available. but there are few myths speaks about his personal life.
It is also said that he had left his house and wife for many time and went to jungle but then return again.
And from this experiences of married life and life of an ascetic he has written three books
(1) Shringaar shatak
(2) Vairagya shatak
(3) Niti shatak
First is about the glory of romantic married life. In the second book he expresses futility of this momentary pleasure.
And the third book is more famous because of its moral, philosophical and rational teaching.
Shatak means hundred. every text like this has one hundred slokas.And Bhartuhari tells about the essence of life in 2 or 4 lines.it is not about any one topic but shows his experiences of wider scope of life.
it can be subdevided as

  • Sajjan prashansa- means praising gentleman.
  • Durjan ninda-criticising bad people.
  • Bhagyani bhavitavyata- greatness of luck.
  • Purusharth nu mahatva- importance of hard work.

Lets see the few translation......



.I bow to God, the self enlightened, the peaceful, free from the bonds of space and time,the infinite, the pure consciousness personified and experienced by Self.
2.A fool can be pleased easily, and it is even easier to please the wise. However, evenBrahma (the creator) cannot satisfy a conceited person with a bit of knowledge.
3.It may be possible to forcibly retrieve a gem from the fanged jaws of a crocodile; onemay even swim across the sea full of turbulent waves, or place an angry serpent on ones head like a flower, but it is impossible to please a conceited fool.
4.One can, perhaps, extract oil by squeezing sand; a man may be able to quench his thirst by drinking water from a mirage; during travel one may even find the horns of a hare; but it is impossible to please a conceited fool.

5.Wanting to reform the wicked with nectar sweet advice, is like trying to control an elephant with the pith of a lotus stem, or cutting a diamond with delicate petals of the Shireesh flower, or sweetening the salty ocean with a drop of honey.
6.The creator has provided only one means for hiding one¶s ignorance which is always under his own control. It is to keep silent, particularly, in the company of the learned.

7.When my knowledge was limited, I assumed that I was fully proficient. I was blinded by pride like an elephant in frenzy. However, when I started learning in the company of theerudite and realized my short comings, the conceit of mine disappeared like fever.
8.A dog is not afraid even if Indra, the lord of Gods, is standing by its side, so long as it isdevouring a donkey¶s bone which might be vermininfested, loathsome, salivadoused,stinking and fleshless. Similarly, a wretch will never pay heed to the unworthiness of his acquisitions.
9.The Ganges descended from the heavens upon the head of the Shiva, and thence, to the mountains. From the high mountains, she flowed down the plains to finally lapse into the sea. Thus, the Ganges kept drifting downwards from one level to another. Similarly,those who have lost their sagacity plunge downwards in a hundred ways.
10.With water, a fire can be extinguished; an umbrella protects one from the heat of the sun;a frenzied elephant can be tamed by a mahout sharp iron goad, and so can a cow and a donkey with a stick; diseases can be cured by an assortment of medicines, and the incantation of various mantras is an antidote to toxicants. The scriptures contain remediesfor all, but there is none for a conceited fool.
11.Those who are devoid of Literature, Music, and Art, are veritable animals without tails and horns. It is the great good luck of other beasts that they don't graze grass, and still survive.






वज्रादपि कठोराणि मृदूनि कुसुमादपि ।
लोकोत्तराणां चेतांसि को नो विज्ञातुमर्हति॥
Vajraadapi kathhoraani mridooni kusumaadapi
Lokottaraanaam chetaamsi ko nu vijnaatumarhati.



The hearts of the best of men who are a cut above the ordinary people are harder than diamond (when facing obstacles or enemies ) and softer than flowers (towards the less privileged and the miserable). Who can understand the hearts of such men?
Work cited-
http://www.scribd.com/doc/3448635/Niti-Shatakam-of-Bhartrihari#scribd