Thursday, November 8, 2012
Adam and Eve's Diary
This is one of my favorite things we have read so far in this course. I love a good love entry in a diary and this fulfills all of the requirements- the growth of love, a rough starting, misunderstanding, resolution in understanding more, and appreciation in old age. (Insert stereotypical Notebook reference here) I loved watching the different characters react to the other in the beginning of their relationship and at the end of it. The love grew so strong out of distain on the part of Adam. Eve was persistent, and semi-annoying, but her intentions were good. It was really sweet.
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Mommy and Daddy of American Poetry
I have read Whitman and Dickinson prior to this class. I love them both immensely. An old professor of mine referred to them lovingly as the Mommy and Daddy of American Poetry, and from then on, that is how I remembered them.
With Whitman's extreme love for life and the self juxtaposed with Dickinson's quiet, meek, and introverted nature of isolation, the metaphor is often questioned. The Song of Myself and One's-self I Sing are my favorite Whitman poems. His celebration of age, suffering, nature, and our bodies is refreshing in comparison to the puritan negativity and realism. Whitman is at times overkill with his positivity but in moderation he is wonderful.
Dickinson is by far one of my most beloved woman poets. Her extreme introversion and all of the autobiographical work written on her enchants me. She lived inside her mind and not in the world. It's extreme isolation for the sake of communication. Her poem, "I heard a Fly Buzz"is so interesting because most of her work is imagined. She has never died. This realm in her mind is magnetic to readers. In "Because I Could Not Stop For Death", she writes on Death's Chariot and the passing of her memories. I have no realm of thought for what death would be like. Her writing skill, and punctuational inventiveness with the dashes, tells of her modern thinking for her time and still today. She created the modern woman and refused the "Four Pillars of Womanhood": Submissiveness, Domesticity, Purity and Piousness by redefining her role in society with a lack of one.
With Whitman's extreme love for life and the self juxtaposed with Dickinson's quiet, meek, and introverted nature of isolation, the metaphor is often questioned. The Song of Myself and One's-self I Sing are my favorite Whitman poems. His celebration of age, suffering, nature, and our bodies is refreshing in comparison to the puritan negativity and realism. Whitman is at times overkill with his positivity but in moderation he is wonderful.
Dickinson is by far one of my most beloved woman poets. Her extreme introversion and all of the autobiographical work written on her enchants me. She lived inside her mind and not in the world. It's extreme isolation for the sake of communication. Her poem, "I heard a Fly Buzz"is so interesting because most of her work is imagined. She has never died. This realm in her mind is magnetic to readers. In "Because I Could Not Stop For Death", she writes on Death's Chariot and the passing of her memories. I have no realm of thought for what death would be like. Her writing skill, and punctuational inventiveness with the dashes, tells of her modern thinking for her time and still today. She created the modern woman and refused the "Four Pillars of Womanhood": Submissiveness, Domesticity, Purity and Piousness by redefining her role in society with a lack of one.
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography Blog
I loved reading Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography. He covered and gave his opinion on topics still relevant today. He said that repetition in life is not to be expected, but to re-live your live, you are allowed recollection of your life. To make that recollection as durable as humanly possible, put it in writing, which seems to be the purpose for writing this piece of literature. He confronts the Puritanical idea of Affliction, saying that he must hope not presume that happiness will ensue helping him bear affliction with more ease.
One of my favorite parts of this excerpt was Benjamin describing growing up and how his father would conduct his dinner table. He learned the lesson that good conversation fed you more than soup and meat. This allowed him to never go hungry or be dissatisfied with actual food, because you can always spark conversation with those willing to have it.
Franklin speaking about how much he read by candlelight after a long days' work, made me feel horribly inadequate as an English Major. Autobiographies tend to make me think of all the things I should be doing. He also, on a whim, became a vegetarian. That screams self-control to me.
I loved how he described his friends Colin and Charles Osborne to be exact, as what they did better or worse than he. Colin was naturally more eloquent and fluent and wore Franklin down with that rather than his strength of reasons in debates. His conversations and depth of purpose in his friendships reminded me of "The Dead Poet's Society". Their love of books and strolling by the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia seemed so natural and it suited their young manhood.
He showed self control in not drinking while he was in London for strength purposes and monetary savings. This put him ahead of the other men by not taking on more debt or having an expense that wasn't necessary. He also lived according to these virtues:
One of my favorite parts of this excerpt was Benjamin describing growing up and how his father would conduct his dinner table. He learned the lesson that good conversation fed you more than soup and meat. This allowed him to never go hungry or be dissatisfied with actual food, because you can always spark conversation with those willing to have it.
Franklin speaking about how much he read by candlelight after a long days' work, made me feel horribly inadequate as an English Major. Autobiographies tend to make me think of all the things I should be doing. He also, on a whim, became a vegetarian. That screams self-control to me.
I loved how he described his friends Colin and Charles Osborne to be exact, as what they did better or worse than he. Colin was naturally more eloquent and fluent and wore Franklin down with that rather than his strength of reasons in debates. His conversations and depth of purpose in his friendships reminded me of "The Dead Poet's Society". Their love of books and strolling by the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia seemed so natural and it suited their young manhood.
He showed self control in not drinking while he was in London for strength purposes and monetary savings. This put him ahead of the other men by not taking on more debt or having an expense that wasn't necessary. He also lived according to these virtues:
1. TEMPERANCE: Eat not to Dullness. Drink not to elevation.
2. SILENCE: Speak not but what may benefit others or yourself. Avoid trifling conversation.
3. ORDER: Let all your things have their places. Let each part of your business have its time.
4. RESOLUTION: Resolve to perform what you ought. Perform without fail what you resolve.
5. FRUGALITY: Make no expense but to do to others or yourself. Waste Nothing.
6. INDUSTRY: Lose no time. Be always employed in something useful. Cut off all unnecessary actions.
7. SINCERITY: Use no hurtful deceit. Think innocently and justly. Speak accordingly.
8. JUSTICE: Wrong none.
9. MODERATION: Avoid extremes.
10. CLEANLINESS: Tolerate no uncleanness in body, clothes, or habitation.
11. TRANQUILITY: Be not disturbed at Trifles, or Accidents common or unavoidable.
12. CHASTITY: Rarely use venery but for health or offspring; never to dullness, weakness, or the injury of your own or another's Peace or Reputation.
13. HUMILITY: Imitate Jesus and Socrates.
He was respectable and his autobiography gave us a deeper insight into him as a person, not just as a leader.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Pennsylvania Gazette
The Pennsylvania Gazette: Containing the Freshest Advices
Foreign and Domestic.
March 25, 1742
Issue 693
The first strange thing I noticed about the Pennsylvania
Gazette was how the S’s were maid to look like odd F’s. It had day to day
accounts of what was happening in London and Madrid and Naples according to
letters. It had death tolls from the Hungarian troops moving towards Bohemia.
There was a lot of international affairs written about in the Pennsylvania
Gazette.
There was an entire letter written to Mr. Franklin written
in German from someone with the initials J.W. Which I find odd, because it’s in
the newspaper. How many people in Pennsylvania can read German- maybe at this
time some of them could because they were recently immigrated from Germany, but
nowadays, there would never be an entire column of a newspaper in another
language.
I enjoyed the Notice given to all persons indebted to
William Clymer threatening to put them away if they didn’t pay their federal
obligations by June. “Very good Rum to be sold” at the end seemed funny.
There are a lot of indebted callings in this issue of the
paper. Also, many small articles that seem like obituaries aren’t remembrances
of people, but casting off of their land or estate to others. It wasn’t about grieving
the losses of people, but what would happen with what was left. That was
interesting to me. It makes sense because of the time, but nowadays we want to
be comforted in remembering the lost loved one, not just selling their land and
moving on with reality.
The paper also listed items from Europe for sale instead of
today’s papers having pictures. They were efficient for the people to know
their inventory and what was in stock and what wasn’t. I liked that way of
doing it. It showed that they were buying to use not buying to buy, for
consumer’s sake.
Over all it was a good paper that told what needed to be
told. I didn’t understand why so much foreign news was being told, or letters
back and forth, but I suppose I don’t really understand why that happens now
either.
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