Weekend Assignments: Arcadia, Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Various Poems by Wordsworth.
I fear I may have made a scheduling error when I put all of my english classes back to back.
I fear I may have made a scheduling error when I put all of my english classes back to back.
Been a long time, but I’m back in town, and this time, I’m not leaving without a queue.
Something, something about this site…
Something about staying up five hours past midnight…
Something about fooling around on my favorite tumblr likes…
Something about, baby, queue and I.
Needless to say, I will be posting a queue of all the best and most interesting poems I’ve been reading this semester. Also in the queue will be reading lists, and a link to my Youtube channel, where I will be telling stories, reviewing books and movies, and just generally sharing my life. I’m so sorry I’ve been neglecting this blog. It’s time to rectify my mistake.
…qtd from novel ‘East of Eden’ by John Steinbeck…
♥♥♥
“All great and precious things are lonely.”
“Just as there are physical monsters, can there not be mental or psychic monsters born? The face and body may be perfect, but if a twisted gene or malformed egg can…
I believe there are monsters born in the world to human parents. Some you can see, misshapen and horrible, with huge heads or tiny bodies; some are born with no arms, no legs, some with three arms, some with tails or mouths in odd places. They are accidents and no one’s fault, as used to be thought. Once they were considered the visible punishments for concealed sins.John Steinbeck, introducing a villain like a MFA. (Master of Fictional Arts, which I believe he is.)
And just as there are physical monsters, can there not be mental or psychic monsters born? The face and body may be perfect, but if a twisted gene or a malformed egg can produce physical monsters, may not the same process produce a malformed soul?
The Painter, John AshberySitting between the sea and the buildings
He enjoyed painting the sea’s portrait.
But just as children imagine a prayer
Is merely silence, he expected his subject
To rush up the sand, and, seizing a brush,
Plaster its own portrait on the canvas.So there was never any paint on his canvas
Until the people who lived in the buildings
Put him to work: “Try using the brush
As a means to an end. Select, for a portrait,
Something less angry and large, and more subject
To a painter’s moods, or, perhaps, to a prayer.”How could he explain to them his prayer
That nature, not art, might usurp the canvas?
He chose his wife for a new subject,
Making her vast, like ruined buildings,
As if, forgetting itself, the portrait
Had expressed itself without a brush.Slightly encouraged, he dipped his brush
In the sea, murmuring a heartfelt prayer:
“My soul, when I paint this next portrait
Let it be you who wrecks the canvas.”
The news spread like wildfire through the buildings:
He had gone back to the sea for a his subject.Imagine a painter crucified by his subject!
Too exhausted even to lift his brush,
He provoked some artists leaning from the buildings
To malicious mirth: “We haven’t a prayer
Now, of putting ourselves on canvas,
Or getting the sea to sit for a portrait!”Others declared it a self-portrait.
Finally all indications of a subject
Began to fade, leaving the canvas
Perfectly white. He put down the brush.
At once a howl, that was also a prayer,
Arose from the overcrowed buildings.They tossed him, the portrait, from the tallest of the buildings;
And the sea devoured the canvas and the brush
As though his subject had decided to remain a prayer.