Thursday, October 30, 2014
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Hamlet Act 2 Scene 2
"What a piece of work is a man"
Become cliche, theme of the play.
We are capable of inhuman and amazing things all at the same time
The players haven't lost their art, they lost the attention of the audience
Hamlet is testing whether guilderstern and rose charms can be trusted
Hamlet tells he paler to tell a story about a king who was unrighteousness his wife and was killed
Hamlet is starting to hatch a plan
He is going to insert some lines in the play as a beginning of the plan
"The plays the thing wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king"
Hamlet soliloquy
Now that time is going on, he is stating to beat himself up for not killing Claudius yet
He compares himself to actor can get self to cry where hamlet is unable to act.
the player can make mind change, hamlet is unable to speak publicly about loud about this, asks if he is a coward
Hamlet is calling self on it because he is the only one who knows what is going and to keep working on it
Says he should be cut up and fed to the birds.
Even if he could speak, talk is cheap and actions are the only thing that mean something
Integrity is word act and deed
If Claudius and Gertrude are at play and feel guilt, they will act
"Play within play"
Hatch plan of play to reveal Claudius and Gertrude
Hamlet wants to show parents that maybe he is weak and will be unable to do anything, when he is really strong and building up plan
Hamlet wants to seem crazy, Claudius is making him out to be crazy, Claudius isn't looking out for him
Monday, October 20, 2014
Hamlet Act 1 Scene 4
The king is having a party and is drinking.
The other countries are looking at them and laughing
Hamlet ready to go where ghost is
"Something is rotten in the state of Denmark"
Vocab
Matin
Ubique- appearing everywhere
Porpentine
Hamelt meets and talks with ghost
Hamelt meets and talks with ghost
Dad in purgatory is what ghost said
Died from murder from Claudius, not snake( metaphor)
Claudius seduced Gertrude, she abandoned her husband, knew Claudius killed him
Uncle poured poison in his ear while taking a nap in the orchard
Ghost says don't punish mother, punish Claudius
"I have sworn't"
Hamlet made up his mind
Pressure is put on Hamlet to fill his obligations, weighs on him.
Hamlet knows truth, validated with proof from ghost
"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy
Hamlet says Horatio and Marcellus can say nothing about this
Horatio and Marcellus swear
"The time is out of joint: O cursed spite, that ever I was born to set it right!"
He feels he was born to avenge his fathers death
Hamlet Act 1 Scene 3
Hamlet likes Ophelia
A you in blood, of passion, feeling
It's feels good but not a good idea
Watch out, hamlet is going after ophelia, but he has duty to a crown
Laertes protects Ophelia , he knows hamlet has lots of responsibilities
You will take this personally, fear Hamlet
Stay away from him
Don't fall in love
She's going to listen to him a little
If you are going down the path of temptation, you need to take your own advice
Lord polonius gives laerates advice
Family of advice givers
Cautel
Have good friends, hold onto them
Friday, October 17, 2014
Literary Fiction and Empathy
I quickly skimmed the article because it is one in the morning, but what the researchers found out was pretty cool. It is especially encouraging to keep reading literary fiction, which I am assuming Hamlet is a part of, because I am really enjoying it so far. It is hard for me to pick meanings out of thin air, but when I listen to the class's and Dr. Preston's interpretations and we watch a movie clip, it really ties it together for me. I think reading about someone else allows you to understand a different perspective other than your own, therefore when interpreting another person's perspective, you not only can use your life as a reference but also Hamlet's or Elizabeth Bennet's or anyone else's. It is similar to reading your friends blogs. When they post their thoughts, you get to see them, know them on a level deeper than others, and can better understand why they make certain decisions, what type of a person they are or what interests them. The similarities between Hamlet and I are striking. We are bother very careful about perceptions that are being put out for onlookers to judge. He and I "bottle", meaning, instead of letting a little emotion out now and then at appropriate times, such as when a scummy step dad is being mean to you (Hamlet, not me), then you have a right it yell and scream and show how upset you are. As opposed to that, there is the option to show nothing but indifference, when you are feeling everything but. Hamlet's cool, I am cool, and I will enjoy learning more about him and lengthening my list of our shared characteristics.
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Hamlet Act 1 Scene 2
The king dies recently
Hamlets dad was king, his mom married claims which was Hamet's dads brother
Painfully Clausdius and Hamlet's mom move on to rile the kingdom
They are at the gathering where Claudius introduces Hamlet
Hamlet says " A little more than kin, and less than kind."
Claudius asks Hamlet why he is still grieving
Hamlet denies Claudius assumption
Hamlet says grieving is just rituals
He doesn't show his emotion on his face
He is saying you can't tell how someone is feeling on the outside, hiding his emotions, and implicating the people who are pretending to be mourning
Starts by saying yes you are sweet Hamlet, then goes to say don't go to school, snap out of it
King makes Hamlet out to look like he is unmanly
King wants to keep friends close and enemies closer
Hamlet says he will try to stay in the place
First time get to see into protagonists mind, Hamlet
Usually direct or indirect characterization, not straight from character and his mind
Hamlet speech
Trying to say he doesn't want to live, wish I didn't have to see this, just leave
He wished suicide wasn't a sin, kill self that he was so angry
Anger towards Claudius rather than self
Was bashing on her mom, had no right to cry, sleep with Claudius.
If she really felt her husbands love and loved him back, then he would have mourned longer
Hamlet went form playing parents to baring sole in conversation
In his conversation with horatio and Marcellus, like detective, asks about details, intelligent savvy person.
Don't stop him from having logical conversations.
Mature person
Starts putting things together
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Experience
My experience reaching out for the first time was strange. just randomly looking for someone who had something to do with Hamlet felt weird. I, however, tweeted to one teacher and wrote on two blogs asking about how those teaches and students could get to the real meaning of what Hamlet meant. After reading about Hamlet, i understood what Dr. Preston had said about it being misinterpreted. Spark notes said exactly what he said it would say. Which didn't surprise me but made me wonder if the teachers and students i talked to would be able to help me unveil a new meaning behind Hamlet, different than everyone else.
Hamlet Act 1 Scene 1
- it has been a quiet cold night and Francisco is thankful for Bernardo relieving him
- Francisco has had nothing happen during his shift guarding
- Marcellus and Bernardo think they have seen something before so they brought Horatio to confirm or deny its existence
- Bernardo, Marcellus and Horatio see the ghost, ask it what its there, but then it leaves because they think they angered it
- its looked like the king
- Ghost comes back and then leaves
Vocabulary List #6
abase - verb cause to feel shame; hurt the pride of
abdicate - verb give up, such as power, as of monarchs and emperors, or duties and obligations
abomination - noun an action that is vicious or vile; an action that arouses disgust or abhorrence; a person who is loathsome or disgusting; hate coupled with disgust
brusque - adj. marked by rude or peremptory shortness
saboteur - noun someone who commits sabotage or deliberately causes wrecks; a member of a clandestine subversive organization who tries to help a potential invader
debauchery - noun a wild gathering involving excessive drinking and promiscuity
proliferate - verb cause to grow or increase rapidly; grow rapidly
anachronism - noun an artifact that belongs to another time; a person who seems to be displaced in time; who belongs to another age; something located at a time when it could not have existed or occurred
nomenclature - noun a system of words used to name things in a particular discipline
expurgate - verb edit by omitting or modifying parts considered indelicate
bellicose - adj. having or showing a ready disposition to fight
gauche - adj. lacking social polish
rapacious - adj. excessively greedy and grasping; devouring or craving food in great quantities; living by preying on other animals especially by catching living prey
paradox - noun (logic) a statement that contradicts itself
conundrum - noun a difficult problem
anomaly - noun (astronomy) position of a planet as defined by its angular distance from its perihelion (as observed from the sun); a person who is unusual; deviation from the normal or common order or form or rule
ephemeral - adj. lasting a very short time; noun anything short-lived, as an insect that lives only for a day in its winged form
rancorous - adj. showing deep-seated resentment
churlish - adj. having a bad disposition; surly; rude and boorish
precipitous - adj. characterized by precipices; extremely steep;done with very great haste and without due deliberation
abdicate - verb give up, such as power, as of monarchs and emperors, or duties and obligations
abomination - noun an action that is vicious or vile; an action that arouses disgust or abhorrence; a person who is loathsome or disgusting; hate coupled with disgust
brusque - adj. marked by rude or peremptory shortness
saboteur - noun someone who commits sabotage or deliberately causes wrecks; a member of a clandestine subversive organization who tries to help a potential invader
debauchery - noun a wild gathering involving excessive drinking and promiscuity
proliferate - verb cause to grow or increase rapidly; grow rapidly
anachronism - noun an artifact that belongs to another time; a person who seems to be displaced in time; who belongs to another age; something located at a time when it could not have existed or occurred
nomenclature - noun a system of words used to name things in a particular discipline
expurgate - verb edit by omitting or modifying parts considered indelicate
bellicose - adj. having or showing a ready disposition to fight
gauche - adj. lacking social polish
rapacious - adj. excessively greedy and grasping; devouring or craving food in great quantities; living by preying on other animals especially by catching living prey
paradox - noun (logic) a statement that contradicts itself
conundrum - noun a difficult problem
anomaly - noun (astronomy) position of a planet as defined by its angular distance from its perihelion (as observed from the sun); a person who is unusual; deviation from the normal or common order or form or rule
ephemeral - adj. lasting a very short time; noun anything short-lived, as an insect that lives only for a day in its winged form
rancorous - adj. showing deep-seated resentment
churlish - adj. having a bad disposition; surly; rude and boorish
precipitous - adj. characterized by precipices; extremely steep;done with very great haste and without due deliberation
Sunday, October 12, 2014
Vocabulary List #5
shenanigans- mischief; prankishness; trickery
Halloween shenanigans.
ricochet - noun a glancing rebound; verb spring back; spring away from an impact
schism - noun division of a group into opposing factions; the formal separation of a church into two churches or the withdrawal of one group over doctrinal differences
eschew - verb avoid and stay away from deliberately; stay clear of
plethora - noun extreme excess
ebullient - adj. joyously unrestrained
garrulous - adj. full of trivial conversation
harangue - noun a loud bombastic declamation expressed with strong emotion; verb deliver a harangue to; address forcefully
interdependence - noun a reciprocal relation between interdependent entities (objects or individuals or groups)
capricious - adj. determined by chance or impulse or whim rather than by necessity or reason; changeable
loquacious - adj. full of trivial conversation
ephemeral - adj. lasting a very short time; noun anything short-lived, as an insect that lives only for a day in its winged form
inchoate - adj. only partly in existence; imperfectly formed
juxtapose - verb place side by side
perspicacious - adj. acutely insightful and wise; mentally acute or penetratingly discerning
codswallop - noun nonsensical talk or writing
mungo- noun- a low-grade wool from felted rags or waste.
sesquipedelian- adj given to using long words (of a word) containing many syllables.
wonky - adj. inclined to shake as from weakness or defect; turned or twisted toward one side
diphthong - noun a vowel sound that starts near the articulatory position for one vowel and moves toward the position for another
Halloween shenanigans.
ricochet - noun a glancing rebound; verb spring back; spring away from an impact
schism - noun division of a group into opposing factions; the formal separation of a church into two churches or the withdrawal of one group over doctrinal differences
eschew - verb avoid and stay away from deliberately; stay clear of
plethora - noun extreme excess
ebullient - adj. joyously unrestrained
garrulous - adj. full of trivial conversation
harangue - noun a loud bombastic declamation expressed with strong emotion; verb deliver a harangue to; address forcefully
interdependence - noun a reciprocal relation between interdependent entities (objects or individuals or groups)
capricious - adj. determined by chance or impulse or whim rather than by necessity or reason; changeable
loquacious - adj. full of trivial conversation
ephemeral - adj. lasting a very short time; noun anything short-lived, as an insect that lives only for a day in its winged form
inchoate - adj. only partly in existence; imperfectly formed
juxtapose - verb place side by side
perspicacious - adj. acutely insightful and wise; mentally acute or penetratingly discerning
codswallop - noun nonsensical talk or writing
mungo- noun- a low-grade wool from felted rags or waste.
sesquipedelian- adj given to using long words (of a word) containing many syllables.
wonky - adj. inclined to shake as from weakness or defect; turned or twisted toward one side
diphthong - noun a vowel sound that starts near the articulatory position for one vowel and moves toward the position for another
Unphotographable Phiction
This is not a picture of me flying down a trail for a pre-ride the day before a mountain bike race. This is not a picture of my face as I take a line that I figure out quickly, is the wrong one. This is not a picture of me bracing for impact. This is not a picture of me getting wrenched sideways, hitting the ground as my leg gets pinned and my skin scrapes along the hard rock. This is not a picture of my hands shaking, trying to drag myself off the trial so I won't get run over. This is not a picture of my elbow and leg bleeding as I dust myself off and get back up. This is not a picture of my expression as I get back on my bike and keep riding.
Post fall that is a picture
Friday, October 10, 2014
Canterbury Outline
In Canterbury Tales, the Narrator shares with the readers the stories he has been able to experience, each having different morals or ideas that helps depict the society during the time the book was written.
The Clerk's Tale shared a message to face what ever is placed in front of you with a brave face
music to listen to when reading
Paragraph 1
introduce clerk's tale
characters
their role, what we might learn from them
thesis
Paragraph 2
evolving characters
dynamic
round
flat
any changes made by reader
how Griselda was found
how characterized, proved?
Paragraph 3
how setting, surrounding influenced story
hoe it was told
why certain things happened
why Walter chose a poor girl
Paragraph 4
different techniques/tone/voice author used
irony
straight forward
wants you to understand (last paragraph)
how structured
what type of tale
similar tales
what was learned
what author wants you to learn
Paragraph 5
conclude thoughts
The Clerk's Tale shared a message to face what ever is placed in front of you with a brave face
music to listen to when reading
Paragraph 1
introduce clerk's tale
characters
their role, what we might learn from them
thesis
Paragraph 2
evolving characters
dynamic
round
flat
any changes made by reader
how Griselda was found
how characterized, proved?
Paragraph 3
how setting, surrounding influenced story
hoe it was told
why certain things happened
why Walter chose a poor girl
Paragraph 4
different techniques/tone/voice author used
irony
straight forward
wants you to understand (last paragraph)
how structured
what type of tale
similar tales
what was learned
what author wants you to learn
Paragraph 5
conclude thoughts
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
Green Eggs and Hamlet
1. I don't know very much about Hamlet, I think a guy wants to commit suicide, and I learned that in class a day or two ago.
2. I know Shakespeare wrote many profound stories or plays, I think Romeo and Juliet was one of them.
3. I didn't know students frowned when they heard Shakespeare. I don't, but maybe because I have accepted that I will have to understand it, whether it is easy, hard or anything in between. I don't necessarily categorize it as hard, yet, so we will see.
4. Maybe have people act out what is happening, everyone has parts so they study their one section and when we read that section, they act it our for us.
2. I know Shakespeare wrote many profound stories or plays, I think Romeo and Juliet was one of them.
3. I didn't know students frowned when they heard Shakespeare. I don't, but maybe because I have accepted that I will have to understand it, whether it is easy, hard or anything in between. I don't necessarily categorize it as hard, yet, so we will see.
4. Maybe have people act out what is happening, everyone has parts so they study their one section and when we read that section, they act it our for us.
The Point of Canterbury Tales is....
In Canterbury Tales, the Narrator shares with the readers the stories he has been able to experience, each having different morals or ideas that helps depict the society during the time the book was written.
Monday, October 6, 2014
Character Study 3
Combined narrative
I finally arrived, its nearly what I imagined it to be... but where are all the hot college boys? Alright Elizabeth, you are here to get an education, eye on the prize!Okay I'll fix my hair just in case I find this mythical creature. I think I will take a stroll up to my new dorm! I mean, I might see a college boy or not, but if I do at least my hair is perfect. Okay, here i go, me, my suitcase, and I, walk, walk ,into the lobby, walk, walk, walk, push elevator button, ding, into the elevator, doors close. Oh, there's elevator music, I like it! I start a small celebratory dance that i made it and I'm on my way to my DORM. It's like I was just in Preston's class a year ago with all my friends and now I am here alone. Okay, fifth floor, here it goes! Oops, forgot my suitcase, ninja skills, and it is snatched from the elevator as the doors try to take my arm with it. then of course the doors open, elevators these days, just awful. Okay back on track, to the room! My roommate will probably be my best friend so I hope she's just not crazy. If I set my hopes low, then i can't get let down right? Yes, lets just aim for not psycho. Such little belief in humans, come on Elizabeth, have some faith! But honestly how can you know these days? Here it is! 518! Door opens and.... wow, this is anticlimactic. Everything is so bare and naked. If only I was crafty, but I'm not, sigh. Well there is a note with a goody bag. Extra points if there is food in it... I trot over like a happy college student and read the note. Take the goody bag, your suit case, and meet in the front of the bus station, more directions will be dispatched once you arrive. Ohhh a scavenger hunt, I like it . I reach in the bag, I feel something metal. What? What could it be? I pull it out and to my shock its a gun. My heart starts pounding and I look around. Am I in the right room? I am so confused. Wait this can't be for me. I look at the note and at the end it says, don't say anything Elizabeth, to anyone. Oh my goodness. I think I am going to faint. I need to collect myself, just like in Taken, I have to do what it says. My family is here and I don't want to put them in danger. This is obviously some cruel joke or something seriously crazy and is this a movie? My phone rings and I almost pee my pants. I make myself look at it even though i just want to hide. It's my mom. I reluctantly answer with a questioning hello? Mom is rambling as usual but I am listening with my full attention because this could be the last time we talk. She and my dad have all my suitcases and are bringing them up. I say okay and hang up quickly. I have got to move. It will be hard to explain things that are in here and escape once they see me. I grab the gun, goody bag and my heavy suitcase that feels light now as my adrenaline kicks in. I start running down the hallway to the elevator, hoping i might run into a set of stair because i defiantly don't want to run into my family. My luck there are stairs across from the elevator. I shove open the door and drag my bag through just as the elevator dings to let someone off. I scurry down the stairs as fast as I can, trying not to fall on my face. I make it to the bottom after so many flights of stairs, I can't count, at least it was going down. I fast walk to the bus stop, trying not to look suspicious or let people know i am about the cry. I sit on the bench and wait for the bus. It speedily arrives and I jump on. I stow any extra "goodies" in my suitcase and sit down. My legs and hands are shaking but thankfully no one is on the bus because they are all unpacking they stuff in the dorms. I wish i could be doing the same. Then my phone rings, I glance at it and its an unknown number. Oh no, I am going to throw up. How yourself together Liz! You are strong and whatever happens, good thing you have muscles. You can do it, answer the phone. So I do. A warbly voice is on the other line. They say everything i need is in the bag and remind me not to tell anyone or they will kill my family, my pets, my friends, you get the picture. I start crying in the middle but they threaten me again which makes me stop for fear of everyone I love. They said I am going to Paris and I have to do everything they say before I can return home.....I am on a plane now, everyone seems perfectly content except me. There is a bunch of turbulence but I am holding completely still and can't seem to move very much out of fear. After the call ended on the bus, I checked the goodie bag and it had directions to get to the airport from the bus stop and a ticket for that night to Paris. There was also a phone inside the bag because I had to smash my phone. A bag was inside for the gun to get it through security. The turbulence has now turned from bad to worse. I would throw up but i hadn't eaten for hours, not that i was hungry.
Now I am wandering through Paris. They hadn't told me what to do once i got here. I got off the plane three hours ago and I had been walking ever since. It was getting cold and I didn't know exactly what I should do. I still had my suit case which thankfully had a heavy coat in it because I am a terrible over packer. I found a bench and huddled under my jacket. I felt uneasy but the exhaustion overruled everything else and I fell asleep.
The next thing I know, Alec, Victoria, Daniel and Matthew are looking over me. Um, is this a dream? I start to come to my senses and sit up. Yep, it is them, all the way from California too. They have the same terror in their eyes that I'm sure I have right now too. I hug them and ask them what is happening. Alec tells me he got woken up in the middle of the night with directions to get on a plane and come here, same with Victoria, Daniel and Matthew. I asked how they found me and they said they had followed their GPS right to my location. At first they thought I was a homeless person because of my rough appearance, but if they looked int he mirror, they would say the exact thing about them-self. That must be some advancement on this phone i have so the people in charge can track me too. "So we are supposed to be on a mission, what is it?" Matthew said," I don't know, but I am hungry, lets go get food." We all gave him a look and Daniel said, "Are you out of your mind!?" Matthew was however insisted on getting a meal, its the most important meal of the day he says, and off we go.
"AHHHHHH!" I am screaming at the top of my lungs. I am holding on with one hand, dangling off the side of a bridge. On our way back from breakfast, I made the executive decision that i would live life on the edge. Literally, I was walking on the edge of the bridge and slipped. "AHHHHH!" Alec and Daniel were pulling me up but I couldn't stop screaming. As Alec and Daniel carry me, they make fun of my lack of balance as I am crying of happiness and scariness. After I was firmly planted back on the ground off the bridge, I pulled myself together as Victoria's cellphone rang.
We are in complete darkness. I am directly behind Victoria with a death grip on her arm. Alec is leading the pack through the catacombs. Our mission is to get into a secret vault to retrieve a box. The tough part is finding it. All we have for light is our cellphones which don't help very much. I don't want to see anything but I have to help search for the vault. It is marked with an "X" made of skulls and their is a faint voice singing as you get close it it. We are all silent as we scavenge for the vault. I am wondering how many people get lost in here and die. you couldn't tell them from the original bodies anyway. Just as I think all hope it lost, we hear it, the singing. We walk quieter as we get closer and closer. Them our phones all got dark. I get even closer to Victoria as we start feeling the walls. With absolutely no light, that is all we can do to find the vault. Matthew finds the X and we all gather around. We agree it is the spot. We all had to work together to turn all the skulls 90 degrees at the same time. It was like a life or death vertical twister because if I hadn't mentioned before, there are traps to catch grave robbers like us.
Now we are running as fast as we can! The vault was successfully opened and Daniel braved the danger to get the box. It was in a coffin, but when he opened it, he found the box, but also a coffin full of creatures that started climbing up him. He yelled for us to go and leave him, as if he wasn't holding the box that we came for. Matthew rushed in and grabbed a hold of him and pulled him out as the creatures started coming for Victoria and me. Alec was at the head of the pack, them Victoria and me, then Matthew and Daniel. Then we hear something start rolling, and all the creatures start to squeak and squish. We felt the air start to whoosh and we realize it is a boulder coming for us. A booby trap must have gotten set off. We keep running and running, and running. Thank goodness for school sports and that we are all athletic. We start to see light and keep going. We reach the surface as the boulder comes slamming into the hole we just ran out of, sealing the catacombs for good.
Canterbury Tales 2: What a Character
Student's Tale
- simile
- sophism- fallacious argument
- told by scholar
- light-hearted tones
- marquis- above count, below duke, is a noble man
- people speak to marquis about getting marries
- they want him to rush to get married, so he will have an heir to the throne because they like him as their ruler so much
- the servants like the marquis rule and they don't want a stranger to take over
- he doesn't want a wife and doesn't want them to choose
- God will choose
- she doesn't have to be rich
My Dashboard
Over the past two weeks, i have been successfully falling behind in my classes. Ever since a small excursion to Illinios, I have been working to catch up. I currently have a list of everything I need to complete turn in and hopefully get some credit but I did find a cool idea on Pintereset that looked fun and a good way to organize. This is similar to what I saw. Colorful and pretty is always nice.
Phonar14 Video
- to be photographer you need passion, camera
- habits, you become a slave to habits, you have to abide by a system that is a solution to a problem
- systems make us not think for ourselves
- photographs- physical, colors, 2D, fixed in time, it ages
- Kodak- worth 28 billion, 100,000's workers
- Instagram- 1 billion, 13 workers
- Snapchat- knows different between image and photograph
- everyone's a photographer with their phone
- photograph is circular, bound by edges if frame, images is actually bigger
- mode of delivery shapes way mode of information
- commerce is shaped way we understand it
- we travel by looking int he rear view mirror
- if you want to change the world, star describing it differently
- stories will be told in a different way
- everyone's a photo supplier
- different perspective for different photographers
- some have a broader understanding than others
- whose version will be authority
- told from different platforms, stories by people who watch or know about something
- stories that explode from different directions
- linear story from students, start, journey, end
- add everyone's journeys together
- connected and trusted
- trusted source, credible perspective
- everyone's connected, challenge is to be heard
- when trusted, people will tell you their stories
- military story connector for families with soldiers in war
- visual culture
Friday, October 3, 2014
Character Study 1
I finally arrived, its nearly what I imagined it to be... but where are all the hot college boys? Alright Elizabeth, you are here to get an education, eye on the prize!Okay I'll fix my hair just in case I find this mythical creature. I think I will take a stroll up to my new dorm! I mean, I might see a college boy or not, but if I do at least my hair is perfect. Okay, here i go, me, my suitcase, and I, walk, walk ,into the lobby, walk, walk, walk, push elevator button, ding, into the elevator, doors close. Oh, there's elevator music, I like it! I start a small celebratory dance that i made it and I'm on my way to my DORM. It's like I was just in Preston's class a year ago with all my friends and now I am here alone. Okay, fifth floor, here it goes! Oops, forgot my suitcase, ninja skills, and it is snatched from the elevator as the doors try to take my arm with it. then of course the doors open, elevators these days, just awful. Okay back on track, to the room! My roommate will probably be my best friend so I hope she's just not crazy. If I set my hopes low, then i can't get let down right? Yes, lets just aim for not psycho. Such little belief in humans, come on Elizabeth, have some faith! But honestly how can you know these days? Here it is! 518! Door opens and.... wow, this is anticlimactic. Everything is so bare and naked. If only I was crafty, but I'm not, sigh. Well there is a note with a goody bag. Extra points if there is food in it... I trot over like a happy college student and read the note. Take the goody bag, your suit case, and meet in the front of the bus station, more directions will be dispatched once you arrive. Ohhh a scavenger hunt, I like it . I reach in the bag, I feel something metal. What? What could it be? I pull it out and to my shock its a gun. My heart starts pounding and I look around. Am I in the right room? I am so confused. Wait this can't be for me. I look at the note and at the end it says, don't say anything Elizabeth, to anyone. Oh my goodness. I think I am going to faint.
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Canterbury Tales 1
Why do they do the first 18 lines of the Prologue in Middle English?
Is it to give the reader a taste of the sophistication of the language and our lack of understanding of it? (i understood maybe three words out of every line)
My Masterpiece 1
My idea so far for the masterpiece is the Happiness Project. General idea is to make people happy. hopefully to male someones day fabulous when it has been terrible. It just "one of those days" where something bad after something bad happens, and that is the perfect time to make someone's day perfect. There is a grant program called Youth Making Change that might allow me to get a little bit of money to buy something for the project. I am not exactly sure what I would do with the money or how I could convince them I needed it but who knows. Also, so my main ideas to to get happy physically (body image, confidence), mentally (less stress?), and emotionally (hopefully happy), where you can smile and say today was a good day. that is the very rough idea of what I wish to do with the Happiness Project, which can hopefully grow into something amazing.
Prologue to Canterbury Tales pages 90-115
Geoffrey Chaucer (1343-1400)
- had a humble beginning, and was slowly able to work his way up in the aristocratic society
- wrote about a husband's late wife, then later was able to master his ability to display his insight to human character
- inspiration for Canterbury Tales might have come from a pilgrimage to Canterbury
- story encompasses medieval literature- romance, comedy, rhyme, prose, crude humor and religious humor
- only 24 of intended 120 stories were finished
- Chaucer was first to "rain the gold dewdrops of speech and eloquence" into English literature
Chaucer's Guided Tour of Medieval Life and Literature
- the rich, poor, old and young are participating in this journey to Canterbury
- 29 pilgrims are going to be on the trip
- Bailey, the host at the inn, proposes they each tell two stories there and two stories on the way back and whoever tells the best story wills a feast from everyone else
- Bailey tags along on the trip to be the judge
- Chaucer describes characters in order of their nobility
- popular genres include
- romances (tales of chivalry)
- fabliaux (short, bawdy, humorous stories, basic human needs)
- stories of saint's lives, sermons and allegories (narratives in which characters represent abstractions such as Pride or Honor
- Chaucer wrote Tales with heroic couplet, a pair of rhyming lines with five stressed syllables each
The Canterbury Tales- The Prolgue
- Canterbury was a popular religious pilgrimage site because an archbishop was murdered there and people went there to pay their respects
- The narrator says he will be taking a pilgrimage to Canterbury
- At the inn, he finds 29 people who also are on their way to take the pilgrimage and he requests to join their group
- Knight tale
- chivalry, trust, honor
- fought in war and many mortal battles
- he was humble, wore cloths as clothes and had son
- Squire tale
- 20 years old
- was in the cavalry, could ride a horse, wanted to win a woman's heart
- was talented, educated, couldn't sleep if something exciting was happening
- Yeoman tale
- servant, forester
- he had lost of weapons, arrows, shield, sword
- had a metal of St. Christopher
- Nun (Prioress) tale
- she sang, spoke French
- good manners, was sad when a mouse died
- Nun (Chaplain) tale
- Three Priests
- Monk tale
- hunter, had greyhounds
- lived lavishly, fancy clothes
- fat and personable priest
- Friar tale
Bede Notes Pages 74-82
From A History of the English Church and People
by Bede
Describes Britain's setting, where it is located relative to other geographical locations.
Bede talks about the land, what grows on it, the species that live in the area, the minerals that are in the ground and the castles that speckled the land.
Pictich sailors wanted to settle on what was land of the Scots, but the Scots refused to grant them a settlement.
The Scots told them about a close island which the Picts moved to and settled.
Some Scots migrated over too.
Britain has large amounts of species, diversity, and life, where the Scots land is very bare and without other species.
by Bede
Describes Britain's setting, where it is located relative to other geographical locations.
Bede talks about the land, what grows on it, the species that live in the area, the minerals that are in the ground and the castles that speckled the land.
Pictich sailors wanted to settle on what was land of the Scots, but the Scots refused to grant them a settlement.
The Scots told them about a close island which the Picts moved to and settled.
Some Scots migrated over too.
Britain has large amounts of species, diversity, and life, where the Scots land is very bare and without other species.
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