Unanswered [6] | Urgent [0]
  

Posts by Te Amari
Joined: Dec 9, 2007
Last Post: Dec 3, 2009
Threads: 3
Posts: 5  
From: United States of America

Displayed posts: 8
sort: Oldest first   Latest first  | 
Te Amari   
Feb 13, 2008
Essays / Comparing Wordsworth's Ode: Intimations of Immortal and Pastan's Ethics [5]

The prompt was: "Compare and contrast any two poems from this packet, and argue a point based on the thematic aspects of the poems."

I'm writing a term paper comparing Linda Pastan's Ethics and William Wordsworth's Ode: Intimations of Immortality about theme. So far, I've got an introductory paragraph...but I really don't know what I'm supposed to do with theme. So I talk about what the meanings are? Is that what I'm supposed to do? (><)

// removed //

--119 words

and now i'm working on my analysis of Pastan's poem...so far, it's a little under 400 words...is that too much on just her part?
Te Amari   
Feb 15, 2008
Essays / Comparing Wordsworth's Ode: Intimations of Immortal and Pastan's Ethics [5]

Thank you for the critique! I've finished writing it last night because I thought it was due soon, butI have a lot more time than I initially thought. To have someone critique the entire essay, should I post it here or on another thread?

William Wordsworth, an Englishman of the early nineteenth century, and Linda Pastan, a contemporary American, are poets from different centuries. Despite this, they both write effectively on the contrast between adulthood and childhood. Wordsworth writes Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood, using imagery, rhyme and iambic line to show that children, because they are more closely connected to the eutopian state of being before birth, are wiser than adults are. Pastan, however, believes that wisdom and the maturity to make difficult decisions comes with age. In her poem Ethics, instead of using iambic lines, she utilizes free rhyme to reveal the theme of her poem. Wordsworth emphasizes the superiority of childhood innocence over adulthood, whereas Pastan stresses that adulthood wisdom is better than adolescent immaturity.

Wordsworth, to introduce the theme of remembering childhood and of a child's lost innocence, uses various literary devices. Wordsworth starts his poem with the words, "The Child is father of the Man." Influenced by Plato's theory of a soul's existence before birth, he clearly shows that in his poem, child begets the man, in that the innocent child comes first, and the grown man follows. He imagines a eutopia of nature, light, and beauty with descriptive language. To illustrate the transition from the eutopia to the realization of earthly life, he says, "while the young lambs bound/As to the tabor's° sound,/To me alone there came a thought of grief" (22-25). Wordsworth effectively introduces the contrast between the physical world and the world whence every soul came. He feels that something has left the earth. He continues his description of a beautiful, natural world, until he asks, "where is it now, the glory and the dream" (60). In the fifth stanza, he gives an important insight. He states, "Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting" (61) and that "Heaven lies about us in our infancy!" (69). He says that one's life is a minor interruption in the life of her soul, which resided in heaven until birth into the physical world. He continues to say that as the soul stays in the physical world, "Earth fills her lap with pleasures of her own" (81). The diversions of the tangible world entrap the soul, using pleasures only found on earth. In the next stanza, he describes a young boy who imitates adults, imitating their lives. He even speaks to the boy as if he were a higher being, whose "exterior semblance doth belie Thy Soul's immensity;/Thou best Philosopher" (110). He elevates the boy's status because according to the belief about preexistence, the child knows more about reality and truth than the speaker does. As he thinks of his childhood, rather than bitterly remembering innocence lost, he rejoices in his memories, saying, "The thought of our past years in me doth breed/Perpetual benediction" (135). As he continues in this vein, he repeats a phrase he spoke earlier: "And let the young lambs bound/As to the tabor's sound!/We in thought will join your throng" (168). In this, he is more energetic and joins in the rejoicing, unlike earlier, when he alone felt a tinge of grief and loss. He believes that children, still in tune with the spiritual world, have truth.

Pastan also uses a variety of literary strategies to argue a complicated point about the gaining of wisdom over a lifetime. She begins with time, describing a class "so many years ago" (1), in which a teacher asked a hypothetical question about ethics "every fall" (2), rather than every year. The fall is an important symbol in this poem, signifying time and change, when things start to die and days become shorter. The teacher asks whether the students would, in the midst of a fire, save a Rembrandt painting or an old woman "who hadn't many years left anyhow" (5). The poet confesses that, at the time, she did not care whether the old woman died or the Rembrandt painting burned. She emphasizes her juvenile indifference toward an ethical situation by using words like "restless" (6), and "half-heartedly" (8). She furthers this by adding another incident in her younger days, when she was young and self-assured. Faced with the question once again, she asked why she could not just let the old woman decide herself. The teacher tells Linda, using her name, that she "eschews the burdens of responsibility" (14), something that the youth often do. The young, believing that the situation does not apply to them, do not care. The poem fast-forwards to present day, where she goes to a museum as an old woman "this fall" (15). She continues in the seasonal symbolism, saying that the colors in the Rembrandt piece are "darker than autumn, darker even than winter" (18). She makes the Rembrandt as real as herself by describing the piece and giving life to it, connecting this to the question proposed every fall in her youth. Even more, she says the colors "burn", comparing this situation to the hypothetical one her teacher posed years earlier. In her maturity, she can see the question become reality, but not the same reality as the one she lives, because the elements are "almost one" (24). In the last line, she says that the elements of the question are "all beyond saving by children." By saying this, she means that some are too young to understand the profundity of ethics, and that one cannot depend on the youth to make decisions concerning certain subjects; they can only understand after maturity and wisdom has set in.

Wordsworth believes that children have truth, whereas Pastan believes truth comes with age. Wordsworth uses Plato's theory in his poem, where Pastan uses personal experience and free rhyme. Her use of free rhyme seems more modern than Wordsworth's poem of iambic fifths or thirds. Her viewpoint is a common thought: with age comes wisdom. Wordsworth's view is based on a Platonic theory that most people would not hold today. However, he writes the truth when he says, "Earth fills her lap with pleasures of her own." This is also true for Pastan's poem. As a child spends more time in the physical realm, on earth, the more she will know of that world. Wordsworth's theme is based on the thought that children come to the earth as innocents, knowing the truths of the spiritual realm, but losing the knowledge of that realm as she gains knowledge of her new world. In Pastan's poem, at first, the speaker has little knowledge of the world or its ethics, but eventually grows in maturity over time. They both recognize a significant change between youth and later life.

Both poets effectively write poems about the change between childhood and adulthood. Wordsworth believes that although childhood was a better, purer stage of life, one can still fondly remember it. Pastan believes that people mature as they grow, learning how to work with the physical world. Even though Wordsworth concentrates on how the young forget their time before birth and Pastan focuses on maturity and age, they both realize that living in this world makes one accustomed to it.

I'll take it off if I should post it on the "Essay Writing Feedback" subforum.

>< I think I seriously veered off the topic at many points.
Te Amari   
Nov 24, 2008
Essays / In search of an Epigraph for an essay on Poe's "Ligeia" [3]

I've written my essay, and it's mostly about how the unreliable narrator warps the appearance of truth. In my introduction, I also write about the unreliability of the mind because it is the narrator's mind that produces the purported truths. I've decided to use an epigraph, but I'm not quite sure if the ones I have fit. Help?

"Only reason can convince us of those three fundamental truths without a recognition of which there can be no effective liberty: that what we believe is not necessarily true; that what we like is not necessarily good; and that all questions are open" --Arthur Clive

"I know but one freedom and that is the freedom of the mind." --Antoine de Saint-Exupery

If anyone has a better one, please suggest it.
Te Amari   
Nov 24, 2008
Writing Feedback / Research paper on Poe's "Ligeia" [4]

It is an analytical research paper (but I haven't inserted the paraphrases from my sources yet), and I tend to go into summary rather than analysis. If someone could check for that and for any grammatical/formatting mistakes, I would be forever grateful!

Ligeia and Rowena represent the antitheses of simple versus sophisticated, tangible versus metaphysical, and the will to live versus the surrender to death to show that the purported truth is subjective to the one experiencing it. Ligeia represents something not of this world. Poe writes that of Ligeia, the narrator "believe that [he] first met her and most frequently in some large, old, decaying city near the Rhine. Of her family-[he has] surely heard her speak" (1). She has no binding to the earth, no historical or familial connections. She exists only for the narrator. The narrator's second wife, Rowena Trevanion of Tremaine, has a family name and a city, the direct opposite of Ligeia. Neither woman has a large speaking part, and the only part that Ligeia has is a reiteration of the poem she supposedly wrote and a fabricated quote from John Glanvill: "Oh God! [...] Oh God! Oh Divine Father!-shall these things be undeviatingly so?-shall this conqueror be not once conquered? Are we not part and parcel in Thee? Who-who knoweth the mysteries of the will with its vigor? Man doth not yield him to the angels, nor unto death utterly, save only through the weakness of his feeble will" (5). Although this is Ligeia's only speaking part, the narrator says that she did ask him to read the poem one other time. As for Rowena, she has no direct speaking parts, but the narrator says time and again how disturbed she feels with the furnishings and the narrator never speaks of Ligeia's feelings. He does not describe Rowena in the same loving way that he did for Ligeia and he continues to ignore his second wife. This continued obsession with the metaphysical, maybe even imaginary, Ligeia makes the narrator's account harder to believe when countered with the tangible yet almost equally silent Rowena. Ligeia's strong will to live, echoed through the fictitious John Glanvill quote, suggests that her resurrection comes from her own power. In direct antithesis to Ligeia, Rowena's death is more of a surrender than a fight. There is no record of her trying to resist death, and her death was uneventful to the extreme. Her lack of resistance presents an image of capitulation: "It was there however, no longer; and breathing with greater freedom, I turned my glances to the pallid and rigid figure upon the bed" (7). Rowena dies without saying a word, without protesting at all. The narrator barely realizes her death as it comes about, as if her life were fleeting and death were silent. It is as if she welcomes death, and it is hardly surprising, considering her husband's hatred toward her and the oppressive atmosphere of her living conditions. This is a great difference between the two women. Ligeia struggles to live, saying that only those with "feeble wills" yield to the angels, to death. By saying this, she condemns Rowena. Knowing the narrators unreliability, one must wonder at the apparent differences between the two women. The narrator describes them both, emphasizing Ligeia's good points against Rowena's bad ones, and unintentionally emphasizing Ligeia's metaphysical nature against Rowena's tangible nature.

So I'm pretty uncertain about putting part of my paper here, but this website did say that there would be proof that it's mine if anyone inquires about it, right? (Turnitin.com unnerves me.) Thanks in advance!
Te Amari   
Nov 24, 2008
Writing Feedback / Research paper on Poe's "Ligeia" [4]

Regarding the section you quoted, would it still be analytical if I just pointed out the things that were missing from Rowena's death that were present in Ligeia's? I tried redoing a bit of that:

"...I turned my glances to the pallid and rigid figure upon the bed" (7). There is no grand proclamation against death, merely a fleeting mention of her departure. There is no mournful language following her death. He merely "turns [his] glances," and does not acknowledge her death with any importance. The narrator barely realizes her death as it comes about, as if her life were fleeting and death were silent.

And thank you for the other information. It lets me breathe easier. Oh, and I found some good examples of MLA citations. Thanks!
Te Amari   
Dec 3, 2009
Undergraduate / Short answer for common app about music [9]

"Music is the universal language of the world.
Music is universal

It has the amazing ability to influence people's moods like nothing else can.
Influencing people's mood: as in, dopamine? Or how music speaks to us not only biologically, but to our souls because it is an art?

Along with the power of influence, music can teach more than just notes and sounds.
What else does music teach? I'm not sure if you said anything else about what music can teach.

Participating in the school band since the fifth grade has taught me to work with others toward a common goal, provided a constructive way to vent when times are tough"

It seems there are two ideas in this statement: Music is cooperative and music is a way to express oneself.

Perhaps you can also write about the transcendent nature of music. I'm a musician too, and I firmly believe in music's power, considering both the biological effects and the the effects on the soul. Maybe this can give some inspiration: wnyc.org/shows/radiolab/episodes/2006/04/21/segments/58272
Need Writing or Editing Help?
Fill out one of these forms:

Graduate Writing / Editing:
GraduateWriter form ◳

Best Essay Service:
CustomPapers form ◳

Excellence in Editing:
Rose Editing ◳

AI-Paper Rewriting:
Robot Rewrite ◳

Academic AI Writer:
Custom AI Writer ◳