Thursday, January 22, 2015

The Yellow Wallpaper

I really liked this short story.  It was very dark, but things about mental illness/madness/insanity have always been oddly fascinating to me.  The woman’s slow descent into madness is described very well, as is her growing obsession with the woman in the yellow wallpaper.  What is especially tragic about this story is the fact that her husband really did love and care about her – and he truly thought he was helping her.  It wasn’t like he locked her up there so she would be in misery; he tried to save her, but it ultimately just made her condition so much worse.

Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day?

really enjoyed William Shakespeare’s “Shall I Compare Thee to a summer’s Day?” because of the simple, sweet message in it.  Shakespeare tells the subject of the poem that he/she is “more lovely and more temperate” than a summer’s day, and says that he/she will live in his verses long after he/she is dead.  I love that there isn’t some hidden dark or vulgar meaning behind this, like there is in so many of the other poems we have read.  It is a straightforward sonnet about love and I think that’s a nice and refreshing change.

The Red Wheelbarrow

I feel the same way about this poem as I feel about “We Real Cool.”  This is basically just a sentence split up in four parts – and no talent was needed to write this “poem.”  It’s absolutely pointless.  If there is some deep meaning behind this poem, Wiliiam Carlos Williams should have tried to express that a little more.

Dickinson and Garbo

Talking about Emily Dickinson was particularly interesting to me because I never knew she was such a recluse.  I knew that the majority of her poems were published posthumously, but that was really the extent of my knowledge regarding her.  Her dislike, or even fear, of the outside world was very similar to Greta Garbo’s.  One Garbo quotation came to mind while reading about Dickinson: “The story of my life is about back entrances, side doors, secret elevators, and other ways of getting in and out of places so that people won't bother me.”  Garbo had few friends, like Dickinson, and would only take walks when it was raining so she could hide her face with her umbrella.

Stop All the Clocks

"Stop All the Clocks” by W.H. Auden has become my favorite poem.  I thought it painted a really beautiful, yet heartbreaking picture of exactly how people feel when they are grieving.  They’re not ready for time to keep moving and they’re not ready to go on with their lives yet – and this poem did an excellent job of capturing that kind of feeling.  Also, it was neither too short, nor too long and it had a nice, simple rhyme scheme.  I love everything about this poem.

Friday, January 9, 2015

The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner

“The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner” by Randall Jarrell was another short poem, but one that I actually really liked.  It is about the death of a gunner on a WWII American bomber aircraft.  In class, we talked about how the majority of the men who flew in these aircrafts did not make it out alive, and the outcome in this poem was no different.  A lot of the men who fought in WWII were very young, and so I believe that the first line “From my mother's sleep I fell into the State,” is referencing that and talking about how fearful those young men must have been.  The last line is also particularly sad: “When I died they washed me out of the turret with a hose.”  To go out that way must have been absolutely horrifying.

We Real Cool

"We Real Cool” by Gwendolyn Brooks was one poem that I did not like.  I thought that it was really pointless, mainly because of how short it was.  The lines were extremely short and the poem itself was short as well.  Another thing I did not like about this poem was the positioning of the words.  “We” was at the end of the line, rather than the beginning, and this whole poem just bothers me.  It seems to be a poem about that “living fast, dying young” lifestyle, but it’s just so boring.  It does not reflect living a fast, exciting life at all.