Old English Literature / Anglo-Saxon literature
· The Old English language, also called Anglo-Saxon, was the
earliest form of English. Old English was spoken from about A.D 600 to about
1100. Old English language cannot be read now except by those who have made a
special study of it.
· Major poets of this period were CAEDMON and CYNEWULF. It is
difficult to say which work belongs to Caedmon. But Cynewulf certainly wrote
four poems which are Juliana, The Fates of the Apostles, Christ, and
Elene. His poems are religious and were probably written in the second
half of the 8th century. Poetry was written in alliterative
tradition.
· Many lyric poems were also written in this period. They
are, The Husband's Message, The Wanderer, The
Wife's Complaint, and Doer's Complaint. Doer is
a singer who has lost his lord's favor. So he complains, but tries to comfort
himself by remembering other sorrows of the world.
· Many heroic epics were also written in this period. These poems
glorified a real or imaginary hero and tried to teach the values of bravery and
generosity. The greatest heroic epic is Beowulf which belongs to the 7thcentury.
· Many poems of this period were religious in theme often
influenced from the Bible. Among them are Genesis A, Genesis
B, Exodus, Daniel, Christ
and Satan and The Dream of the Rood. The Genesis
B is about the beginning of the world, the fall of the angles and
God's punishment to Satan. The Exodus describes how the
Israelites left Egypt. Similarly, another poem Christ and Satan deals
with the events in Christ's life and His struggle with Satan.
· The important prose writers
of this period were King Alfred and Aelfric. King Alfred translated a number of
Latin books into Old English, so that his people could read them. The
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is the first important prose work in English
literature which contains the early history of the country. King Alfred ordered
the collection of this early history and number of early writings and brought
them into order. He brought back learning to England and improved the education
of his people. Similarly, Aelfric wrote mainly religious prose such as Homilies and Lives
of Saints. He also wrote out in Old English the meaning of the first
seven books of the Bible.
Beowulf
Beowulf is
the greatest and the first Old English epic poem, which belongs to the 7th century.
Beowulf, a brave young man of southern Sweden goes to Denmark to help King
Hrothgar and his people. Hrothgar is in trouble because his great hall- Herot-
is visited at night by a terrible creature, Grendel. Grendel lives in a lake
and comes to eat Hrothgar's men. One night Beowulf waits secretly, and when
it comes to attack the people, he pulls its arm off. Grendel escapes to the
lake but dies there. Then, its mother comes to the hall for revenge. Terrible
fight begins between Grendel's mother and Beowulf. Beowulf follows her to the
bottom of the lake and kill her there. The King Hrothgar rewards Beowulf with
lots of treasures.
Fifty years later Beowulf, now king of his native
land, fights a fire-breathing dragon that has devastated his people. He kills
the animal but is badly wounded in the fight, and dies. The poem ends with a
sorrowful description of Beowulf's funeral fire.
The verse of this epic follows alliterative
tradition. Metaphors are abundantly used: For example, whale's road is used
for ocean; sea soldier is used for a sailor.
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Middle English Literature
Important
questions: 1. The Canterbuy Tales 2.
Morality plays 3. Miracle
plays 4. William
Langland. 5. Gorffrey
Chaucer. 6. Show your acquaintance with
the Middle English Literature.
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The period from 1100 up to 1500 is termed as
Middle English period. Since the rulers of England at this period were of
French descent, English language was highly influenced by French literature,
vocabulary, forms and themes. French was considered as the language of
aristocracy and Latin maintained its role as the language of learned works.
The literary works in this period were
religious in theme- mainly influenced from Bible. These works taught moral
lessons and religious way of life.
Poets / Poetry
1. Geoffrey Chaucer:
Chaucer is the first original genius in the
history of English literature. He is often regarded as the father of English
poetry. He was the son of a wine merchant but later became duke, diplomat and
then the personal attendant of the King. He had wide knowledge of Latin, French
and Italian books.
His works:
a). The Canterbury Tales:
It is a realistic piece of literature that gives the picture of the 14th century
England more clearly than any laborious history. The Characters in this poem
are from all sectors of life- rich and poor, good and bad. It contains 17,000
lines-about half of Chaucer's literary production. It is a series of different
kinds of stories told by a group of pilgrims who are on their way to Canterbury
(The church in which Thomas Beckett is buried). It contains 22 tales told by
different pilgrims in verse. Among the pilgrims are monk, the nun, the priest,
the friar (the begging monk), the merchant, the lawyer, the doctor, the cook,
the sailor, the carpenter, the knight and the most enjoyable character known as
the Wife of Bath.
The Wife of Bath has had five husbands and had
travelled to Jerusalem and Rome. She is a woman who desires to tightly control
her husbands. She is like a modern woman with her firm sexuality and independence.
The Monk and The Friar do not live religious life. The Monk has the passion for
hunting and loves roasted swan while the Friar is corrupt, married many times.
He asks people to give him money so that people would go to heaven. The Farmer
and the Knight are good, helpful and honest. The characters are like real
people with both good and bad sides.
b). Troilus and Criseyde:
It is a story of love and betrayal with moral overtones. It is about a
faithless woman Crysede. The background is Trojan War. Troylus falls in love
with widow Crysede and wins her love. But later she falls in love with Greek
Diomede and betrays Troylus. Troylus becomes bold and cruel in battles and is
eventually killed by Achilles.
c). The Legend of Good Women:
It gives accounts of loving and faithful women- including Cleopatra, Philomela,
etc.
2. William Langland:
Historians know very little about William
Langland; however, they claim that he wrote 'The Vision of Piers
the Ploughman'. This poem is famous example of old alliterative
verse. In such lines the repetition of certain sounds helps create a mood.
"
In a somer seson, whan soft was the sonne…"
It is sadly concerned with the religious,
social and economic problems of his time. It is a work in the form of dream
visions describing the sorrows of the poor people, the greed of the powerful,
and the sinfulness of all people. Langland sadly describes how most people
prefer the false treasures of this world to the true treasures of heaven. The
emphasis is placed on a Christian vision of the life of activity, of the life
of unity with God.
3. Anonymous writer:
a). Sir Gawain and the Green Knight:
This is a story about King Arthur. Green Knight asks King Arthur to send a
knight to strike him a blow with the heavy axe. But the bet is that a year and
a day later the knight would come and receive the similar blow from that Green
Knight. Sir Gawain, one of the knights of King Arthur strikes off the Green
Knight's head, but the Green Knight simply picks his head up and goes. Sir
Gawain goes to find Green Knight. On the way he meets a lord and a lady. The
lady gives him the magical girdles that will save him from death. Later Green
Knight gives him a severe blow with the axe but Gawain is saved. This is a tale
of a knight who has to struggle against the enemies with magical powers with
all his honor.
b). Pearl: It is a poem
about the poet's daughter whose name is pearl and who died at the age of two.
The poet sees her in heaven living with angles. This comforts him.
Prose
1. Richard Rolle:
Richard Rolle wrote 'The Form of
Perfect Living' which is full of religious teachings. It gives detailed
moral lessons on how to work, dress, live, talk and behave in society.
2. John Wycliffe:
He was a priest who attacked many religious
ideas and the church of his times. He believed in direct relationship between
humanity and God, without priestly mediation. He believed that by closely
reading the Bible, Christians would govern themselves without the help of popes
and other religious teachers. He arranged the production of Bible in English
and also translated some parts of it. Before this, Bible was only available in
Latin. After he was dead and burried, his opponents dug up his bones and threw
them in the River Avon.
3. Thomas Malory:
Sir Thomas Malory was a violent man, who was
several times in prison. He wrote "Arthur's Death" while
he was in prison. This book is a collection of various tales about King Arthur
and his knight-adventurers, who followed the Christian way of life, bravery,
love and justice to right people by defeating the wrong ones. Guinevere, the
wife of King Arthur falls in love with Lancelot. Their love affair is the major
cause of Arthur's ruin and death. It also contains King Arthur's search for the
cup used by Christ at the Last Supper.
Dramas
1. Miracle plays or
Mystery plays:
The subject matter of miracle or mystery plays
were the miracles performed by the saints. The stories were mainly from the
Bible. Miracle plays, also known as Saint plays, were presented at Easter
(festival commemorating the resurrection of Jesus Christ) and on other holy
days. During those days very few people could read the Bible which was then
written in Latin. So, the clergy (religious teacher) managed these types of
plays in order to teach and explain the doctrinal truths of religion to the
ignorant peasants These plays were performed in movable stage that could be
moved from one place to another in wheels. These plays were in four main
groups, according to the city where they were acted: Chester, Coventry, York
and Wakefield. Often several miracle plays were performed at the same time in
different places.
2. Morality plays:
These plays were popular in the 15th and
early 16th centuries. The characters of these plays are not
people, but they are abstractions (good qualities and bad qualities) such as
beauty, flesh, lechery, strength, pride, envy, hope, charity, sin, strength,
etc. These are designed to instruct people in the Christian way of life and the
Christian attitude towards death. The general theme is the conflict between
good and evil in the human soul. However, the play always ends with the saving
of the soul and the triumph of good over evil.
The best known of the morality play is Everyman,
which probably was derived from a Dutch source. In the play, the protagonist
(main character, hero) Everyman learns that everything material he has gained
in life deserts him as he journeys into the Valley of Death. When Death calls him
away from the world, all the characters like Beauty, Knowledge, Strength, Pride
leave him but only Good Deeds follow him.
2. Interludes:
Interludes were short plays that provided
comic relief in between the acts of long morality plays or in the middle of
meals. They were intended to cause laughter among the audiences. They were
short plays only with two or three actors that would excite the audiences and
remove the boredom. They were not acted in churches but in colleges, gardens
and parties. The Four P's and The Play of
the Weather were the interludes written by John Heywood.
Middle English literature
Writer and their
works
Poetry
1. Geoffrey Chaucer a).The Canterbury
Tales b).Troylus and Crysede c).The Legend of Good Women
2. William Langland a). The Vision of
Pier's the Ploughman
3. Anonymous writer a). Sir Gawain
and the Green Knight b). Pearl c). Patience
Prose
1. Richard Rolle a). The Form of
Perfect Living
2. John Wycliffe - Translated part
of Bible into English and helped it to publish in English.
3. Thomas Malory a). Arthur's
Death
Types of Dramas
1. Miracle or mystery plays – about the lives of
Saints, religious in themes, stories from Bible.
2. Morality plays – designed to teach moral
lessons, abstractions were personified.
3. Interludes – used to provide comic relief
between two acts of a play.
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Elizabethan
Period
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Drama
(V.V.I)
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Poetry
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Prose (
Not so important)
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1. THOMAS KYD
& The Spanish Tragedy: It is a tragedy of blood in
which father takes revenge of his murdered son. A ghost of the son appears to
his father demanding revenge. The father later kills his son’s murderer. It
is a tragedy of blood that was popular at that time. Later Shakespeare wrote
Hamlet based in this plot.
2. CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE
& Tamburlaine the Great: It is about Tamburlaine who is
blood thirsty and violent. For him even love is a war. Tamburlaine, a
shepherd who later becomes a robber, has a terrible ambition to gain more
power. He kills everyone who are his rivals.
& Jew of Malta: It is about Barabas, a faithless
man who poisons his own daughter and later tries to kill Turkish officers but
is ultimately killed by them.
& Dr. Faustus: This play is based on
Faustus who sells his soul to devil Mephistopheles to gain power and more
knowledge. He even asks the devil to bring beautiful Helen of Troy so that he
can kiss her.
& Edward the Second: This play deals with English
history. It is about the fall of King Edward.
3. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: ( Next
page)
4. BENJAMIN JONSON
His plays are comic plays. The
characters are walking humans and not really humans. His language is polished
but not inspirational. He shows how in every one of us there is hidden
foolishness. His comedies are called ‘comedy of humours’
& Every Man in his Humour: It is about of Kitely who
suspects that his beautiful wife is having love affair with Knowell.
& Volpone the Fox: Volpone, a childless but rich
man pretends that he is about to die. Many people give him various gifts to
please him and gain his wealth. One person even gives him his wife.
& Sejanus: It is tragedy acted at Globe
theatre by Shakespeare’s company.
& The Alchemist: This plays shows how people are
attracted towards gaining easy gold but are ultimately cheated by the
Alchemist. Alchemist is a person who claims that he can turn iron into gold.
& Every Man out of his Humour:
5. JOHN WEBSTER
His plays are called ‘blood and
thunder plays’. He shows lots of violence, murder and deceit in his plays.
His famous plays are The White Devil andThe
Duchess of Malfi.
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1. EDMUND SPENSER
His verses are musical. He wrote
his poems in his own rhyme plan- ababbcbcc, which is called ‘Spenserian
stanza’. He wrote many sonnets about love, nature and beauty.
& The Shepherd’s Calendar: It is a pastoral poem because it
deals with the lives of shepherds, and presents them as simple, honest and
healthy. It is a poem in 12 books where each book represents the 12 months of
a year. There are various subjects- praise of Queen Elizabeth, discussion
about religion, the sad death of a girl and son on.
& The Faerie Queen: This poem is about Queen
Elizabeth or Glory as a person. He planned to write 12 books but could
complete only six books. There are 12 knights who represent different virtues
– holiness, chastity, justice, courage etc. Each knight has to overcome
obstacles to prove his valour and courage. King Arthur is shown as a
gentleman with great virtues.
& Epithalamion: It is a marriage song expressing
his joy after being married when he was over forty.
& Prothalamion: It is a lyric expressing his joy
when his two daughters were married at one time.
2. JOHN DONNE
He is a metaphysical poet. He uses
irony, and conceit in his poems. He wrote both religious and love poems. His
poems are highly intellectual and difficult to understand. His poems areThe
Flea, The Ecstasy….
3. SIR PHILIP SYDNEY
& Astrophel and Stella
4. CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE
& The Passionate Shepherd to
his Love
5. BEN JONSON
& To Celia
6. THOMAS WYATT & EARL OF
SURREY
They wrote fine sonnets which were
influenced from Italian. Surrey was the first to bring sonnet into England.
Surrey was the first to write poems in blank verse.
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1. FRANCIS BACON
& Essays
& A History of Henry VII
& The Advancement of Learning
& The New Atlantis
2. BEN JONSON
& Timber (Discoveries)
3. RICHARD HAKLUYT
& The Principal Navigations
& Voyages and Discoveries of
the English Nation
4. SAMUEL PURCHAS
& Purchase his Pilgrims
5. JOHN LYLY
& Euphues
6. THOMAS NASH
& The Life of Jacke Wilton
7. WILLIAM TYNDALE
He translated the New Testament
from the Greek, and part of the Old Testament from the Hebrew.
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Christopher Marlowe
He
was both a dramatist and a poet of Elizabethan period. He is the first great
dramatist of Elizabethan period. His writings set an example for other
dramatists in the Elizabethan period in two important ways – the use of
powerful blank verse and the development of characters to heighten the sense of
tragedy. His plays are tragic plays with lots of violence and murder. His
characters are ordinary people who are full of passion and desire. He was
killed in a quarrel at an inn when he was 29 years old.
His
dramas are:
Tamburlaine the Great: The first part deals with the rise to power of Tamburlaine, a
shepherd who later becomes a robber. He captures Zenocrate and marries her. For
him even love is a conquest. His terrible ambition drives him ever towards more
power and cruelty. His ambition is to become the ruler of the whole world. So,
his armies capture Bajazet, ruler of Turkey, whom Tamburlaine takes from place
to place in a cage.
In
the second part, Tamburlaine becomes more blood-thirsty. He goes to capture
Babylon in a carriage which is pulled by two kings. He whips the kings and
curses them. If they become tired, he orders to kill them. He orders his armies
to drown all the people of Babylon. He cuts his own arm to show his son that a
wound is unimportant. He even kills his own son when he finds him enjoying
instead of going to war.
Jew of Malta: The Governor of Malta is cruel towards the Jews and taxes
them. But Barabus, a rich jew, refuses to pay the taxes. The governor takes
away his house and money. So, Barabus begins his life of violence. He poisons
his own daughter and makes her lover to die too. He helps the Turks when they
attack Malta, so they make him the governor of Malta. He wants to become more
powerful. So he makes a plan to kill all the Turkish officers. He invites the
officers to have meal with him and arranges that the room would fall suddenly
whey they come. But this secret is known by the Turkish. They throw him below
the floor into a vessel of boiling water.
Dr. Faustus: This play is based on Faustus who sells his soul to devil
Mephistopheles to gain power and more knowledge. The devil has to serve him for
24 years and provide him what he wants. He even asks the devil to bring
beautiful Helen of Troy so that he can kiss her.
Edward the Second: This play deals with English history. It is about the fall
of King Edward.
William Shakespeare
He was born in Statford-on-Avon. His career
developed from a curtain puller to actor, then a playwright and later a
dramatist. He understood the sentiments of all class of people. He perfected
blank verse in his dramas. He is the true representative of Elizabethan period.
He studied previous poems, stories, legends, folklores and coloured them anew
with his unique imagination and mastery of language.
His Three Roman Tragedies
a). Julius
Caesar b). Antony and
Cleopatra c). Coriolanus
His Five Great Tragedies:
a). King Lear b).
Macbeth c).
Othello d).
Hamlet e).
Romeo and Juliet
His Comedies:
a). As You Like
It b).
Comedy of Errors
c). Two Gentlemen of
Verona d). A Midsummer
Night’s Dream e). Twelfth
Night f).
All’s Well That Ends Well
g). Much Ado About Nothing
His Romances:
a).
Cymbeline b). The Winter’s
Tale c). The Tempest
His Historical Plays:
a). Richard the
Second b).
Richard the
Third c).
King Henry the
Fourth d).
Henry the Fifth
e). Henry the Sixth.
Romeo and Juliet
It is a story of two teenaged lovers, Romeo
and Juliet. Their families are enemies. Romeo and his friends, in a disguise,
attend the mask ball given by Juliet’s father. Romeo and Juliet fall in love in
their first meeting and decide to marry. The next day they get married secretly
by Friar Lawrence. Returning from the wedding, Juliet’s cousin meets Romeo and
quarrels with him. Juliet’s cousin kills Romeo’s friend, so Romeo stabs him to
death. Romeo is exiled from the city. Juliet’s father tries her to marry her
cousin because he does not know that she is already married. Friar Lawrence gives
her a drug which will put her into death-like sleep for 42 hours. He then sends
a messenger to tell Romeo about their plan of escape. But Romeo does not
receive the message. He falsely hears that Juliet is dead. He hurries to the
tomb where she has been placed. There he takes poison and dies by her side.
Juliet awakens to find her husband dead. She stabs herself. The discovery of
dead lovers convinces the two families that they must end their feud.
Macbeth
Macbeth, who is returning from a battle, meets
three old witches. They tell him that he will receive high honors and then
become the King of Scotland. The first part of witches’ prophecy comes true.
Then Macbeth has an ambition to become the King of Scotland. Encouraged by his
wife, Macbeth murders King Duncan of Scotland, who has come to his castle as
his guest. But King Duncan’s sons escape. The three witches had also prophesied
that Banquo’s descendents would be the kings of Scotland. So Macbeth orders to
kill Banquo and his sons. Banquo is killed but his son escapes. Macbeth becomes
more violent and kills everyone whom he does not trust. Lady Macbeth dies
because she is burdened by her guilt. At the end of the play, Macbeth is also
killed and King Duncan’s son becomes the king of Scotland. Macbeth’s weakness
is his terrible ambition.
King
Lear
This tragic play shows how people are open to
flattery. King Lear has three daughters. His two daughters are wicked while his
youngest daughter is truthful. The two wicked daughters try to show their love
to King Lear but inwardly they want his kingdom. The youngest daughter always
tells the truth. He gives his kingdom to his two wicked daughters but gives
nothing to his youngest daughter who loves him the best. His wicked daughters
neglect him and force him to spend a night outdoors during a storm. Later he
becomes mad. His youngest daughter who has been living in France returns and
finds him mad. Armies of two wicked daughters find King Lear and his youngest
daughter and kill her. The two wicked daughters love the same man, so one of
the sisters poisons her own sister and later kills herself. King Lear also dies
of broken heart. This play shows the difference between appearance and reality.
King Lear’s weakness is his openness to flattery.
Othello
It is a story of a brave commander Othello. He
has a young and beautiful wife named Desdemona. Othello raises the rank of
Cassio, one of his soldiers. Iago, his another soldier, is jealous of him and
makes a plan to destroy him. He tries to make Othello believe that Cassio and
Desdemona are lovers. Othello falls under the plan of Iago and kills his
innocent wife with a sword. When Othello discovers the truth, he kills himself
with the same sword. Othello’s weakness is his sexual jealousy.
Hamlet
When the story begins, Hamlet’s father, King
of Denmark, is dead. His mother has married his uncle Claudius. Claudius has
become the King. Hamlet suspects that his uncle murdered his father. The ghost
of Hamlet’s dead father appears to him and tells him about his murder. Hamlet decides
to take revenge but he wants to find the proof before taking revenge. He is too
much a thinker. He asks a band of traveling actors to perform a play before
Claudius whose plot is similar to his father’s murder. Claudius shows violent
reaction during the play that makes Hamlet believe that Claudius is the
murderer. He goes to kill him, but finding him in prayer, he changes his mind.
At the same time when he sees someone is behind the curtain, he kills the man
with his sword thinking that the man is Claudius. But he has killed Polonius.
Claudius then sends Hamlet to England. In the letter to King of England he asks
for the murder of Hamlet. Hamlet is saved because he had changed the letter. In
the end, fighting is arranged between Polonius’s son and Hamlet. Both are badly
wounded and are about to die. Hamlet raises and kills Claudius. Hamlet’s
weakness is that he is too much a thinker, not a man-of-action.
THREE
ROMAN TRAGEDIES
Julius
Caesar
It is a political tragedy. The hero is Brutus,
who joins with Cassius and other conspirators, to kill Julius Caesar. Before
the body of dead Caesar, Brutus defends to the people of Rome that killing of
Caesar was necessary for the good of country Rome. After the speech of Brutus,
the clever and cunning Antony makes a speech before the crowd. He then
describes the plotters with heavy sarcasm and praises the virtues of Caesar.
The crowd is ready to kill and burn the conspirators. Brutus and his friends
flee away. At last, Brutus commits suicide when he is defeated by Antony.
Antony and
Cleopatra
The main subject of this drama is the Antony’s
love for the Egyptian queen Cleopatra. Antony, the king of Rome has a wife
named Octavius. But he lives in his captured state Egypt with a mistress
Cleopatra. Death of his wife forces forces him to return to Rome. Back in Rome,
he marries Octavius’ sister Octavia; but he returns to Egypt because of his
love towards Cleopatra. His wife Octavia wages a battle with him but Cleopatra
does not help him. Cleopatra deceives Antony and makes him think that she is
dead. Antony stabs himself with the sword. Before he dies, he learns that she
is still alive. He then goes to her and dies in her arms. Later Cleopatra also
dies after pressing a poisonous snake to bite her.
Coriolanus
This play is about the life and death of
Coriolanus, a proud Roman commander who leads his armies against the Volscians
and beats them. On his return to Rome, he wishes to become one of the
rulers of the city. To succeed in his aim, he must ask the people for votes.
His pride makes this impossible, he cannot beg for votes or for anything else.
He is driven from Rome for insulting the people. He comes back with the
Volscian army to attack his own city. There he meets his wife and mother who
persuade him to lead the army away. The Volscians then kill him for failing in
his duty.
John Donne and Metaphysical poetry
Metaphysical poetry is the
term given to the poems written by John Donne and other 17th century
poets like Andrew Marvell, George Herbert. In metaphysical poems, the poet uses
clever tricks of style and unlikely comparisons. These poems are complex,
paradoxical and with twisting ideas. They blend emotion with intellect. The
poems are filled with bold conceits.
John Donne is the most
important metaphysical poet. He wrote both love and religious poems. In his
poems, he often puts the main beat on words of little importance. In his
poem The Flea, the man asks his beloved not to kill the
flea. He says that the flea has sucked the blood of both of them, so the flea
has become their marriage bed. Similarly in his another poem The
Ecstasy, the poet claims that love is the combination of both soul and
body.
John Milton and His Times
John Milton lived a pure life, believing that
he had a great purpose to complete. At college he was known as theThe Lady
of Christ’s. He was the advocator of democracy. He supported the Parliament
during the English civil war between the King and Cromwell. He was a Christian
humanist. He was a studious person. He had wide knowledge of Greek, Latin,
English, French and Italian literature. He also had great affection for music.
His literary career can be divided into three phases.
First phase
He wrote shorter poems. His poems are:
L’Allegro (the
happy man): In this pastoral poem the poet describes the joys of life in the
country in the spring season. This poem describes beautiful scenery of the
fields in the morning and the carefree life of farmers and shepherds.
I L Penseroso (the
thoughtful man) : This poem is set in autumn season. He describes the
activities of a man who has to do his moral duty. The duties include visiting
the church, listening to the music and studying books.
Comus : It is a masque ie
a dramatic presentation with music.
Lycidas: It is a pastoral on the death of Edward King, his fellow
student at Cambridge. He had died by drowning.
Arcades
Second phase
In the second phase he mainly wrote prose
works supporting Cromwell and the parliament. He wrote pamphlets attacking the
King. He also wrote articles about church affairs, freedom and divorce. His
language was violent in this phase. His main work is Areopagitica that
advocates the freedom of press. When the parliament passed an act requiring all
books to be licensed by an official censor, Milton was against it. In this book
he argues that there should be freedom for writers and printers.
Third phase
This phase began when Milton became totally
blind by 1651. When Charles II became the King, Milton turned into a quiet life
and wrote his finest poems. This was his most productive phase. His works
include:
Paradise Lost: This
epic is his masterpiece, which is written in 12 books. The story of the book is
taken from the Bible. It is simple and common story of the fall of Adam and Eve
from the grace of God due to their disobedience. Satan who lives with God in
heaven leads a revolt against God. After the terrible war between Satan and
God, he is thrown into hell. Satan then decides to take revenge on God by
spoiling God’s latest creation – the humans. Adam and Eve, the first man and
woman, created by God live in Eden. They live a carefree life without any work,
boredom or pressure. God asks them not to eat the fruit from the Tree of
Knowledge. But Satan, disguised as a serpent encourages Eve to eat the fruit.
Eve eats the fruit. Encouraged by Eve, Adam also eats the fruit. After eating
the fruit, they begin to feel sexual passion and know shame for the first time.
God curses Eve that her life would always be sorrowful by bearing children and
helping her husband. God curses Adam that he would eat bread only by hard work
and sweating.
Paradise Regained: It
deals with the conflict between God and Satan but is less splendid.
Samson Agonistes : It is a
tragedy on Greek model that describes the last days of Samson, a character from
the Bible. Samson, in his last days, is the prisoner of Philistines. They make
him blind and force him to provide entertainment to the Philistines lord.
Samson pulls down the columns of the building and the whole building collapses
killing all the Philistines and himself.
Cavalier Poets
A group of poets of mid-17th century
who wrote in favour of King Charles I are called Cavalier poets. These poets
wrote witty and light-hearted poems. They wrote short, light, and elegant lyric
that appeal ‘carpe diem’ meaning ‘seize the day’. These poets emphasize on the
mortality of human life and briefness of physical beauty. These poets usually
wrote love poems and poems about nature. The poets belonging to this group are
Robert Herrick, Andrew Marvell, Richard Lovelace and Sir John Suckling.
ROBERT HERRICK: His poems are musical,
polished and addressed to beautiful ladies. He also wrote about English
country, its flowers and nature. In his poem ‘To the Virgins to Make Much
Time’, he asks the lady to love him when she is still young because the
time is running in speed. Otherwise, time will turn her old and nobody will
love her. In his another poem, ‘Upon Julia’s Clothes’, he
praises the woman’s beauty.
RICHARD LOVELACE : His best love poems
are ‘To Althea, from Prison’ and ‘To Lucasta, on Going
to the Wars.
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Restoration Period
The period after the restoration of King
Charles II in 1660 upto 1700 is known as restoration period. During this period
two types of dramas were written- comedy of manners and heroic tragedies.
Comedy of manners:
After restoration of King Charles into the
throne, a new taste in dramas emerged which is termed as comedy of manners.
These plays are hard and bright, witty and heartless. These dramas focused on
the manners and ideals of high class society. The common themes concerned
marriage, sex and fashion. The characters are people of fashion, fops, cunning
people and beautiful ladies. The plot concerned battle between male lust and
female thoughtfulness.
The important dramatists were:
a). Sir George Etherege: He introduced comedy
of manners. His play ‘The Man of Mode’ gives the picture of
immoral manners of the society at that time. The play presents the war on sex.
b). William Wycherley: He is a satirical
dramatist. In his play ‘The Country Wife’, Mr. Horner shows
himself to be respectable but inwardly he is full of lust. Another character
Mr. Pinchwife does not let his wife meet other people because he fears that she
may fall in love with other man. But he lets Mr. Horner to come to his house
because he looks very simple. Later Mr. Horner seduces the wife of Mr.
Pinchwife through his cunning simplicity. Similarly, in his another play ‘The
Plain Dealer’ the protagonist shows hatred towards his corrupted
society but later becomes corrupted himself.
c). William Congreve: He is a mature
dramatist. His comedy ‘The Old Bachelor’ is about and old
fellow who pretends to hate women. Later he marries a bad woman. His another
comedy ‘The Way of the World’ presents the love intrigue of
high class people. This play is finer than any other plays of that time.
d). R.B. Sheridan: In his drama ‘The
Rivals’ he presents a comic character Mrs. Malaprop who talks too
much to show her superiority. But most of her words are wrong and out of
context. For example, she says, ‘pineapple’ for pinnacle and ‘geometry’ for
geography. His another drama ‘The School for Scandal’introduces
three characters whose love for scandal is so great that they strike the
reputation of another character at every words they speak.
Heroic Tragedies / Heroic plays of Restoration
period:
The tragic dramas of this period were made up
mainly of heroic plays. In heroic plays, men are very brave and the women are
splendidly beautiful. These plays are called heroic plays because they are
written in heroic couplets, a form of meter perfected by John Dryden. Heroic
plays rhyme in pairs eg, - aa bb cc ……The subjects of heroic plays are love and
battle for good purpose.
The important dramatists were:
a). John Dryden: He wrote some of the finest
heroic plays. His play ‘All for Love’ is based on the love
affair between Antony and Cleopatra and their tragic death. His play ‘Aurengzebe’ is
based on a struggle for empire in India. His other heroic plays are ‘The
Conquest of Granada’ and ‘Don Sebastian’.
b). Thomas Otway: His three tragedies are
best. They are ‘Venice Preserved’, ‘Don Carlos’ and
‘The Orphan’.
Restoration Prose
a). John Bunyan: His two major works are ‘The
Pilgrim’s Progress’ and ‘The Holy War’. These works
are religious in themes and are influenced from the Bible.
b). John Locke: He is important because his
works contain simple and clear language. His works helped to spread democratic
philosophies in the world. His major essay is ‘Essay on the Human
Understanding’.
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Eighteenth Century Literature
Eighteenth Century is often called as Age of Reason because
writers of this period focused their work on social concern. They thought that
reason is more important than emotion or imagination. For them, order was
important in men’s thought. Comfortable towns were usually preferred to the
wild mountains. The writers of this period attacked the follies and evils of
the society in harsh and direct language. Many journals like ‘The Tatler’ and
‘The Spectator’ were published. Similarly, people gathered in coffee houses and
debated about religion, politics and literature openly.
Eighteenth Century Poets:
a). Alexander Pope: He used mock-heroic poems as a means of satire to attack the
social foolishness. He said that the proper study of mankind is man. His health
was bad. He thought of life as a long illness. He also translated theIliad and
the Odyssey of Homer.
His important works are:
Essay on Criticism: In this book, Pope suggests that writer should follow the
classic rules of Homer and Virgil. He says that to copy Homer is to copy
nature.
Essay on Man: This poem claims that the proper study of mankind is man. He
claims that poets should study man and his society. The Rape of the
Locke: This mock-epic poem satirizes on the fashions, norms, laziness,
and double standards of the ladies of 18th century England.
Belinda is a fashionable girl. Lord Petre cuts her hair in a theatre sitting
behind her. The quarrel begins from home to whole of London.
The Dunciad: This mock-heroic poem attacks the dull writers of his times who
wrote to earn their breads.
b). William Blake: He is also one of the Romantic poets. His poems have hidden
meanings that are hard to understand. He did not believe in the reality of
matter, or in the power of earthly rulers, or in the punishment after death.
His best knows poems are included in ‘Songs of Innocence’ and ‘Songs
of Experience’. The poems in ‘Songs of Innocence’ are simple, lyrical and
easy to understand. The poems included in ‘Songs of Experience’ are difficult,
paradoxical and symbolic.
c). Churchyard Poets / Graveyard Poets:
The poets of the late 18th century who chose death for their subject
are grouped as Graveyard poets. These poets are Edward Young, Robert Blair and
Thomas Gray.
* Thomas Gray: His ‘Elegy
Written in a Country Graveyard’ is one of the most beautiful and
famous poem. It describes his thoughts as he looks at the graves of country
people buried near the church at Stoke Pages. He wonders what they might have
done in the world if they had better opportunities. His ode ‘The Bard’ is
a sad song which curses King Edward I, who had put all the Welsh poets to
death.
* Edward Young: His ‘Night
Thoughts’ is about life, death, the future world and God. It is
written in blank verse.
* Robert Blair: He also wrote his
poems in blank verse. In his poem, ‘The Grave’, he begs the dead to come
back and tell something about the grave.
Eighteenth Century Prose Writers
a). Daniel Defoe: He began his career as a writer by writing pamphlets, essays and
poems and later wrote his most famous novel ‘Robinson Crusoe’. The story
of this novel is based on real event but the characters are fictional. The main
character Robinson Crusoe is left alone in an uninhabited island after a
shipwreck. He spends almost 28 years in that island rearing goats, birds and
doing domestic activities. Another novel ‘Moll Flanders’ is about a beautiful
girl whose thirst of money corrupts her. She ultimately becomes a prostitute.
b). Jonathan Swift: He was a bitter satirist. He attacked discrimination and the
evils of the society. His ‘Tale of a Tub’ attacked religious ideas. In ‘A
Modest Proposal’ he suggests that the poor, who need money should sell
their children to the rich as food. This is a severe attack on the wealthy
people and government of England that was responsible for poverty in Ireland.
Another of his famous satire is ‘Gulliver’s Travels’
c). Samuel Richardson: His novels examine the human hearts and show the human’s
character, attitude, feelings and emotions. His novel ‘Pamela’ is about
a girl named Pamela who is the maid of Squire B’s mother. Squire B tries to
seduce her. He treats her badly. But Pamela resists him. Due to her virtue, his
lust changes to love. He offers her a marriage. Another novel ‘Clarrisa’
is about a beautiful and talented girl Clarrisa. She is forced by her family to
marry Solmes because every family members would get something in return from
Solmes. In revenge she later marries a rake who sell her to a brothel.
d). Richard Steele and
Joseph Addison: These two worked together in producing ‘The
Tatler, a
paper of essays on various
subjects. A more famous paper ‘The Spectator’ followed. They
were educators. They were mild satirists. They
exposed the evils and follies of the society. The visible feature of 18th century
was the appearance of coffee houses. The coffee houses became the place for
exchange of news and ideas. These two newspapers were born in coffee houses.
e). Novel of Terror /
Gothic Novels : The novels of terror of gothic novels
are about ghosts, witches, supernatural elements and dead persons. The plots
are mysterious and frightening. They show impossible events. The writers
include:
*Horace Walpole: His ‘The Castle of
Otranto’ is a novel about the 12th and 13th centuries.
It is about a ghost that lives in an old building and haunts beautiful ladies.
*William Beckford: His ‘Vatek’
is about a man Vatek who visits the hell and is punished for his crimes.
*Ann Radcliffe: Her greatest novel ‘The
Mysteries of Udolpho’ is set in mountains. It describes the life of a girl
Emily who is held by her aunt’s husband in a dark castle.
[Similarly, Mary Shelley’s novel ‘Frankenstein’
is also a gothic novel]
………………………………………………………………………………………………
Nineteenth Century Literature
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||
Novelists
|
Poets
|
Prose
Writers
|
1). Early Nineteenth Century
Novelists
a). Jane Austen
b). Mary Shelley
c). Sir Walter Scott
2). Victorian
2). Victorian Novelists ( Later
Nineteenth Century Novelists)
a). George Eliot
b). Emily Bronte
c). Thomas Hardy
d). Charles Dickens
e). Oscar Wilde
f). William Makepeace Thackeray
g). Charlotte Bronte
|
1). Romantic Poets (Early
Nineteenth Century Poets)
a). William Wordsworth
b). S.T. Coleridge
c). P.B. Shelley
d). John Keats
e). Lord Byron
2). Victorian Poets ( Later
Nineteenth Century Poets)
a). Robert Browning
b). Alfred Lord Tennyson
c). Matthew Arnold
|
a). Charles Darwin: He is one of the greatest
scientists of the world. His scientific works brought heated debate in
England. His works are :
& A Naturalist’s Voyage Round the
World: This book gives account of his journey in the ship named Beagle.
& The Origin of Species: His famous book that puts forward
the principle of natural selection. He claimed that species are not formed by
God but by natural selection. Nature brings variation in plants and animals.
& The Descent of Man: This book claims that human’s
ancestors are apes. Thus it attacked the Christian notion that God created
humans. This book was highly criticized at that period.
b) William Hazlit: He was an important essayist
of his time. He was a quarrelsome man. His most important essays are on
literary criticism. His language is violent and filled with political ideas.
His works are ‘Characters of Shakespeare’, ‘Lectures on English Poets, and
‘English Comic Writers’.
c). Water Pater: He claimed that the main aim of
art is to search beauty- not to teach social or moral lessons. Poetry should
not contain ideas but should please the senses. His main work is ‘Conclusions
to Studies in the History of the Renaissance’.
|
ROMANTIC POETRY
ROMANTICISM
(EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY POETS)
Romanticism is a literary movement that came against the 18th century
Age of Reason. Romantic poets were against established rules of poetry. They
thought that the poems should be written in simple language or the language of
common people. For them, imagination is more important than scientific reality.
They wrote about nature, village, common people and about mythical characters.
For them, the aim of poetry is to please the sense.
Main Romantic Poets:
a). William Wordsworth: He
was the poet of nature. He wrote poems about ordinary and common things. He
said that the language of poetry should be the same as the language of common
people. He praised rural life. His important works are:
The Lyrical Ballads: This
important work gave the signal of the beginning of Romantic age. It was in fact
a joint work of Wordsworth and Coleridge. The publication of the first edition
of the Lyrical Ballads came as a shock because it violated many established
rules of that time. Its major subjects were common people, farmers, and
shepherds. Even the language used was simple everyday language of common
village people. The poems praised nature. They saw God in nature. In Lyrical
Ballads, Wordsworth said that the subjects of poetry should be incidents and
situations from common life and should be written in ordinary language
understood by common people. His poem ‘Tintern Abbey’ was collected in this
book. In this poem, the poet visits River Wye and remembers his boyhood days.
He thinks that nature is far more superior to the corrupt human society.
London: This
poem is a cry for help in the troubles of the world.
Ode on Intimations of Immortality : In
this poem the poet realizes that childhood period is better than the laborious
adult days. This poem also praises nature.
b). S.T. Coleridge: He
wrote about mysterious things. He makes ordinary things seem wonderful. His
treatments to supernatural themes and meditative dimensions made him a true
Romantic poet. His major poems are:
Kubla Khan: This
poem gives the imaginary description of the castle of Kubla Khan, the emperor
of ancient China. The description of the castle produces strange and magical
pictures.
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner: This
poem appeared in the first edition of Lyrical Ballads. An old sailor describes
some strange misfortunes that happened to the ship. He shot a bird when he was
in a ship in the ice of the South pole. A curse fell for this crime,
water-supply ended and all the sailors died of thirst. At last, the mariner
blesses the creatures of God and the curse is broken. He is saved. The moral of
this poem is that crime against nature is crime against God.
c). P.B. Shelley: He
was a true revolutionary poet because he was against the accepted religious
ideas. He saw goodness in the whole of nature, and he wanted all men to be
free. His poems are:
Adonais: It is
one of his finest poems, is an elegy on the death of John Keats. The poet
claims that John Keats lies in heaven while his critics are the fools of the
world.
The Cloud: The
cloud is personified in this poem.
Promethus Unbound: It is a
poetic drama on the Greek Prometheus myth. It shows the victory of love over
hatred and revenge. The poet says that God are selfish, they hide secret from
the world.
The Revolt of Islam: This
poem is a cry of impatience at the cruelty of the world.
d). John Keats: He
wrote poems about mythical characters and mythical themes. He died at the age
of 25 because of tuberculosis. He thought that the aim of poetry is the
appreciation of Beauty. His poems give pleasure to the senses.
Ode on a Grecian Urn: The
main theme of this poem is that art escapes from death, time and change. In
this poem the poet claims ‘Beauty is truth, truth beauty.’
Ode to a Nightingale: The
poet wants to run away with the nightingale but he thinks that imagination is
the best medium to escape from this human world.
Endymion: This
early poem is based on old ideas : the old gods, the love of moon-goddess for a
shepherd, Venus and Adonis. He treats old myths in a strange way.
e). Lord Byron: He
was a revolutionary poet. He went to fight for the freedom of Greece. He
satirized many sides of English life and hated all false and insincere ideas.
His poems are about adventure, love and rebellion. His major poems are:
Don Juan: It
is an adventurous poem which describes the life of rebellious and moody Don
Juan. Don Juan falls in love with the friend of his mother. He has to run away
because the society can not tolerate this type of love. This poem is the
expression of free sexuality.
Childe
Harold: This poem is written in Spenserian
stanza. It is about the story of a man who goes off to travel far and wide
because he is disgusted with life’s foolish pleasures.
Difference between
18th Century Age of Reason
& Romanticism
|
|
18th Century / Age of Reason
|
Romanticism
|
*
The writers wrote polished heroic poems caring poetic rules.
*For
them, reasoning was necessary to find truth.
*
They wrote poems about kings, soldiers or courtiers and praised them.
*
These writers preferred comfortable towns to the wild mountains.
*
They thought that poetry comes from the mind.
*
For them, the aim of poetry is to teach.
|
*
The poets wrote simple poems without caring poetic rules.
*
For them, imagination was more important that reason.
*They
wrote poems about shepherds, farmers and common people.
*
These writers preferred wild mountains and nature to the comfortable towns.
*
They thought that poetry comes from the heart.
*
For them, the aim of poetry is to give pleasure.
|
Victorian Poets
(Later Nineteenth Century Poets)
1. Alfred Lord Tennyson: He is
one of the most excellent Victorian poets. His works are serious and thoughtful
as well as musical. He wrote about nature, God, men and meaning of life. His
poems are often sad and pessimistic. He was worried about the modern science
and about Darwin’s theory. He experimented with new meters and his stanza’s
rhyme plan is often – abba. His poems study myth and mythical characters from a
new perspective.
His major poems are:
The Lotos Eaters: This poem is about the soldiers of Ulysses, who on their
way to home from Trojan war, happen to eat the flower of a ‘Lotos’ plant. After
eating the plant, the soldiers feel that all the troubles of life, work, war
and ambition are meaningless.
The Idylls of the
King: This poem is based
on Arthurian legend where the love story of Guinevere (Arthur’s wife) and
Lancelot is shown.
In Memorium: This is an elegy on the death of his friend who died at
the age of 22. Later, the sorrows for the death of his friend changes into an
expression of a wider love of God and man.
The Princess:
Ulysses:
2. Robert Browning: He thought that idea was more important than music in
poetry. While Tennyson’s poems were pessimistic in tone, his poems are
optimistic. He married Elizabeth Barret Browning, a Victorian poetess. He is
especially famous for the development of dramatic monologue, a literary
composition in which the speakers reveal their own character. His major poems
are:
Andrea del Sarto : This poem studies Renaissance artists.
The Ring and the
Book: This book is his
masterpiece. It is about the events of a 17thcentury Italian murder
trial. The characters in the poem are studied with psychological depth.
The Pied Pipers of
Hamelin: It is about a Piper
who gets rid of all the rats of a town called Hamlin by playing his musical
pipe. When the mayor of the town does not give him money that he had earlier
promised to give, the Piper then plays his pipe and takes all the children of
the town and hides them in a cave.
My Last Duchess: This poem also presents the psychology of the rich Duke of
Ferrara. He kills his wife when he thinks that she is immoral.
Early Nineteenth Century Novelists
1. Jane Austen: Her
novels are calm pictures of society. She understood the importance of family in
human affairs. Though her two brothers were in navy (army), she paid little
attention to the violence of nations. Her novels are novels of manner. She
brought the novel of family life to its highest point of perfection. Most of
her characters correct their faults from the lesson learnt from the life’s
hardship. In every of her work, she highlights the need of friendship and
respect for a happy family. Her major novels are:
Sense and Sensibility: It
is a novel about two sisters- Elinor and Marianne. Elinor is balanced,
reasonable and has too much sense while her sister Marianne possesses too much
sensibility. Marianne is too much emotional. These two sisters are betrayed by
their lovers. The novel ends with both of them getting married. Elinor gets the
man whom she loved dearly. But Marianne marries an old man who helped her when
her first lover betrayed her.
Pride and Prejudice: The
book focuses on Bennet family and the search of the Bennet daughters for
suitable husbands. The story follows Bennet and her lover, who have to give up
their personal pride and prejudice before they enter into a happy marriage.
Emma
Northanger Abbey
2. Mary Shelley: She
was the wife of P.B. Shelley. She wrote novels of terror. Her main novels are:
Frankenstein: This
book can be considered as the first attempt at science fiction. Frankenstein, a
college student, collects bones, builds a human body and then gives life to it.
The creature is ugly but good. Everyone hates it for its ugliness, so it leads
a lonely and violent life. This monster demands a female being like him who
will become his companion. Frankenstein makes a female monster but immediately
destroys it before giving it life. The monster then promises to take revenge.
It kills Frankenstein’s brother, friend and his wife. Frankenstein goes in
search of the monster but dies in the North pole. The monster is the symbol of
modern scientific invention.
The Last Man: It
is a story of the slow destruction by disease of every member (except one) of
the human race.
3. Sir Walter Scott:
Victorian novelists
Or
Later Nineteenth Century Novelists
1. Charles Dickens: He is
one of the greatest English novelists. He wrote novels based on social issues.
He is a realist novelist. He bitterly attacked the social evils, the
money-minded rich people, and the industrial society. In his novels, he
presents the lives of poors, their miserable condition and the cruel treatment
of society to the poors. He attacked the bad effects of Industrial revolution
that caused poverty, diseases, injustice and many other ills. He shows how true
man is surrounded by villains, social climbers, criminals and cheats. In his
different novels he describes and attacks many kinds of unpleasant people and
places- bad schools, school teachers, government departments, bad prisons and
bad houses. His characters include thieves, murderers, men in debt, stupid,
hungry children and cheats. His major novels are:
Hard Times: Thomas
Gradgrind is a scientific man who teaches his children about facts and
scientific reasoning. Emotion and imagination are never allowed in the lives of
children. Consequently, his son robs the bank of his own relative while his
daughter becomes a fragmented woman. Later Gradgrind understands his
foolishness. This novel is an attack on science and scientific reasoning.
A Christmas Carol: The
main protagonist Scrooge does not celebrate Christmas and he gains pleasure by
behaving other people badly. He is greedy and selfish. Three ghosts remind him
his past, present and future and his coming death. Scrooge then becomes
helpful, warm, loving and leads a religious life. Nicholas Nickleby: This
is a tale of a boy who is left poor on his father’s death. He is sent to work
in a school, Dotheboys Hall. There the master, Squeers, treats forty miserable
students cruelly, and teaches them nothing. Nicholas beats the criminal Squeers
and then escapes.
Oliver Twist: Oliver
Twist is an orphan. He runs away from his workhouse and joins a band of
pickpockets. He leads a criminal life because of hunger and poverty. Twist gets
caught stealing from a wealthy man. The man finds that Twist is his nephew. This
novel presents the cruel treatment of poor by the society.
David Copperfield
Bleak House
Pickwick Papers
2. William Makepeace
Thackeray: He was born and raised in a wealthy family. He is famous for
his humourous and ironic description of the middle and upper classes of his
time. He attacked the behaviours, duplicity and falsity of upper class society
of his time. He gave the honest view of life. He knew that men and women are
complex and humans have both good and bad qualities. His novels are realistic,
colourful and lively. He understood that weak and innocent people are not
rewarded but pushed to the wall. His major novels are:
Vanity Fair: This
novel is about an ambitious woman named Becky Sharp, poor but of noble birth.
She uses her wit, cunningness and duplicity to become successful. She has to
change according to the society’s worldly standards. This novel satirizes the
values of upper class English Society. Duplicity and double-standard are
essential to succeed in life.
The Newcomes: This
novel is based on the life, love and marriage of Clive Newcome, the son of an
honourable officer who loses all his money.
The Pendennis
3. Emily Bronte: Her
characters are passionate but cruel. She was too much imaginative and
passionate than her sister Charlotte Bronte. Her most successful novel is:
Wuthering Heights: In
this novel, passionate Heathcliff falls in love with Catherine. When Heathcliff
hears Catherine saying that she could not marry such a low man, he leaves the
house. Three years later he returns becoming rich but finds Catherine married
to Edgar, a man of weak character. Heathcliff buys neighbouring estate
Wuthering Heights. Heathcliff then begins a life of cruelty and revenge.
Catherine dies, and Heathcliff marries Edgar’s sister, and treats her badly.
4. Charlotte Bronte: She
lived in poor surroundings. Her poverty and unhappy life frequently appear in
her novels. Her novels are able to develop strong feelings and emotions on the
readers. Her novels are realistic. Her main novels are:
Jane Eyre: It
tells the story of an orphaned girl who falls in love with a married man. Jane
Eyre is a poor and unbeautiful girl who is brought up by a cruel aunt and sent
to a miserable school. She goes to teach the daughter of Mr. Rochester.
Although she is not beautiful, Rochester falls in love with her. When she
discovers that his mad wife is still alive, she runs away. Later the house of
Rochester is on fire and his mad wife is burnt to death. Rochester tried to
save her but could not. He becomes lonely and depressed. On hearing all of
this, Jane Eyre marries him.
Villette: It
reflects the personal experiences of the writer when she was in Brussels;
without beauty or money. She then becomes a teacher and wins respect by her
good character.
The Professor: It
describes the events in the life of a schoolmaster.
5. Thomas Hardy: In his novels, nature plays an important part.
Almost all of his novels are set in Wessex, among farms, trees, fields and low
hills. His novels are darker and pessimistic in tone. The characters are
controlled by fate, chance and natural forces. The characters work hard but can
not fight with the fate or natural force and they die a miserable death. Most
of Hardy’s characters can not control their passion, greed and lust, so they
are destined to fall. All of Hardy’s major works deal with unhappy
relationship, several with divorce. He thought that in this meaningless
world people only suffer and surrender to fate. His major novels
are:
Far from the Madding Crowd: In
this novel, Gabriel, a shepherd, loves Bathsheba with a true heart. He serves
her faithfully for many years. But Sergeant Try, an attractive but cruel
soldier , marries her and treats her badly. He is murdered by an angry farmer,
and after many troubles Bathsheba marries Gabriel. This is the story of patient
love on one side and selfish passion on the other.
The Mayor of Casterbridge: This
novel is about Michel Henchard. He sells his wife and daughter when is drunk
for a few pounds. He promises that he will not drink alcohol for twenty years.
He then goes to Casterbridge, becomes mayor and wealthy person. He falls in
love with Lucetta. But when his wife and daughter arrive, he changes his mind.
Lucetta marries Henchard’s enemy. Henchard then loses all his wealth and starts
drinking again. At the end, he dies a miserable death.
Jude the Obscure: It
is a story of Jude Fawley – a poor stone-worker. Since childhood he longed to
become a religious teacher, but could not escape the problems caused by his own
sexual desires and heavy drinking. Fate is against him. His marriage is a
failure, and he falls in love with a clever teacher. Sorrows follow their life
together; their children die, then Jude begins to drink heavily that
causes his death.
Tess of the D’Urbervilles: It
is a tale of a poor girl, Tess, who is seduced by D’Urberville. She marries
another man Angel Clare who abandons her on learning of her misfortune. Tess
later murders her seducer D’Urberville to free herself from him. She is
arrested and hanged.
The Return of the Native
6. George Eliot: She
wrote with sympathy, wisdom, and realism about English country people and
towns. She wrote seriously about social and moral problems. She wrote calmer
books which are full of moral lesions. She wanted to teach through her novels.
Her novels are set in domestic and rural environment. Her major novels are:
Middlemarch: The
story revolves around moral choices in an imperfect world. It is considered to
be her masterpiece and one of the greatest English novels.
Adam Bede: It
is about Adam Bede, a carpenter, who dearly loves Hetty Sorel. Sorel is
interested only in Captain Donnithorne. Marriage is arranged between Adam and
Hetty, but she escapes in search of her lover Captain Donnithorne. She does not
find him. She gives birth to a child but leaves it in the woods. The child
dies. She is sent to prison.
Daniel Deronda
Silas Marner
…………………………………………………………………………………………………
Twentieth Century Literature
Drama / Plays
|
Novels (and Prose)
|
Poetry
|
1. Absurd
Theatre
a). Samuel
Beckett
b). Harold
Pinter
2. Serious
Political and Social plays
a). G.B.
Shaw
b). John
Galsworthy
3. Comic
plays
a). Oscar
Wilde
b). Tom
Stoppard
|
1. Women Novelists
a).
Virginia Woolf
b). Iris
Murdoch
c). Doris
Lessing
d).
Margaret Drabble
2.
Detective Novelists
a). A.C.
Doyle
b). Agatha
Christie
c). John
Le Carre
3. Science
Fiction
a). Arthur
Clarke
b). George
Orwell
c). H.G.
Wells
d). Doris
Lessing
4. Other
Novelists
a).
Rudyard Kipling
b). E.M.
Forster
c). D.H.
Lawrence
d). James
Joyce
e). George
Orwell
f). Joseph
Conrad
|
1. War
Poets
First
World War Poets:
a). Rupert
Brooke
b).
Siegfried Sasson
c).
Wilfred Owen
d). Isaac
Rosenberg
2. Second
World War Poets:
a). Roy
Fuller
b). Keith
Douglas
2. Poets
who attacked modern civilization:
a). W.B.
Yeats
b). T.S.
Eliot
c). W.H.
Auden
3. Poets
who wrote about nature and natural life:
a). Dylan
Thomas
b). Ted
Hughes
|
Main features of 20th Century
Literature [ Literary Creativity of 20th Century
England.]
· Many women writers like Virginia Woolf, Iris Murdoch and
Margaret Drabble wrote about female experiences. They attacked male dominated
codes, norms and themes. Their main characters are women and they write from
female point of view. They wrote about the lives, problems and special concerns
of women in the modern world.
· Many writers wrote psychological novels examining the deep and
hidden psyche of the characters.
· Writers wrote about taboo subjects like lesbianism, gay, sex
openly. The works of modern writers had no fixed themes. They were to open to
many interpretations.
· Since this century faced two World Wars, the writers wrote
against war, violence and barbarism. Patriotism began to be thought as absurd
and meaningless.
· Writers invented new forms and techniques, breaking away the
established literary rules. James Joyce, Virginia Woolf and D.H. Lawrence
introduced stream of consciousness technique. Similarly many absurdist writers
introduced the theme of meaninglessness of human existence.
· In this period, the marginal groups raised their voice in
their works. Writers such as G.B.Shaw and John Galsworthy attacked the social
and political corruption of England.
· Writers like T.S. Eliot, W.H. Auden and W.B. Yeats wrote about
religious awakening. These writers thought that modern world has gone mad
because man has lost faith in religion and God.
· Science fiction and detective novels also emerged in this
period.
………………………………………………………………………………………………….
Twentieth Century Drama
1. Theatre of the absurd / Absurdist
dramatists:
Samuel Beckett is considered as the grand
master of theatre of the absurd. The other dramatist belonging to this group
are Harold Pinter and Tom Stoppard. The writers belonging to this group show
their anguish at the absurdity of human condition. For them, the man’s
existence on earth is meaningless. We do the same thing day after day. There is
no newness or growth. They claim that our life is boring, dull and monotonous.
The characters in their plays are often handicapped and like priosers. They
cannot communicate with other individuals. There is no proper plot and there is
action without any purpose.
a). Samuel Beckett: He was born in Ireland.
His plays are despairing plays. His characters refuse love and relationship
with other person. He sees the language as building a wall between human beings
which stops them communicating. His major dramas are:
Waiting for Godot: This
play shows two tramps, Vladimir and Estragon, waiting for Godot whom they
haven’t known. Godot never comes to meet them, and may not even exist. They do
a lot of talking but their communication is meaningless and without any logical
reasoning.
Krapp’s Last Tape: It
has only one character, an old man sitting in a closed room with the
tape-recorder, in which he hears his previous recordings and compares to his
present situation.
Happy Days :
b). Harold Pinter: The central theme of his
plays is every people is stranger to the other. Humans can not communicate
meaningfully with others. Humans are trapped in their own world. His major
plays are:
The Caretaker: The
main themes of this play is that no one takes care of others. There are only
three characters and each characters are empty. Their words and actions do not
match.
No Man’s Land: This
play shows the meeting of two old men who had known each other when they were
young. One is now rich and successful while the other man is in many ways a
failure. In a sense, they are enemies. Although on the surface they meet as
friends, there is always a feeling of danger between them. In some ways it is
the rich and successful man who is the real failure, because in his heart he is
living in the ‘no man’s land’ of no feelings and no hope.
The Birthday Party:
2. Serious plays on social and political
criticism:
a). G.B. Shaw: He was born in Ireland. He gave
new points of view and way of looking at themselves and the society they lived
in. He delighted in showing the opposite of what his audiences expected.
Several of his plays show in various ways the working of his theory of the
‘Life Force’, the power that drives people to value life as a great gift and
fight for a better world, and that leads women, in particular, to want to have
children so that life can be continued. He did not believe in Christianity but
the life force. He uses comedy to expose the social evils. Shaw wrote more than
50 plays during his lifetime. His major plays are:
Man and Superman: This
drama shows that a women’s real aim in life is to find the man that nature
tells her is the right father for her children.
The Apple Cart: This
is a political play which shows that he was in favour of monarchy rather than
democratic leaders.
The Devil’s Disciple: In
this play, the man whom conventional society has thought of as evil and selfish
is willing to sacrifice himself for others, while the minister of religion
discovers that he should have been a soldier.
Major Barbara: In
this play, the heroine, a woman of strong personality and ideals, exchanges her
belief in Christianity for that in the Life Force.
Arms and the Man: He
presents a soldier as a sympathetic figure who does not want to fight.
Pleasant and Unpleasant:
a). John Galsworthy: He criticizes the social
and political evils of the society and shows great sympathy towards poor and
helpless people. His major novels are:
Strife: In this play, he
shows how the strike troubles the poor and working class people.
Justice: This is about a
poor man who signs a false cheque and later is sent to jail by the judge.
Hopelessly he kills himself.
3). Comic plays:
a). Oscar Wilde: His most famous play is ‘The
Importance of Being Earnest’ which is filled with witty language. Two girls in
this play fall in love with the name Earnest. They are in search of the man
named Earnest. Two men pretend themselves to be Earnest and trap those girls in
their love. This shows the difference between appearance and reality. The
characters are shallow and cunning with double standards.
b). Tom Stoppard: He chooses characters from
earlier plays and places them under different situations to provide audiences
with new insights. His play ‘Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead’ is about
two minor characters of Shakespeare’s play Hamlet. Similarly, his another play
‘Travesties’ contains the characters of Wilde’s play ‘The Importance of Being
Earnest’ but they are analyzed from different point of view.
…………………………………………………………………………………
20th Century Poetry
1. War Poets: The
poets who participated in the war or whose poems are about war are termed as
war poets.
► First World War poets: These
poets participated in the First World War from England.
a). Rupert Brooke: He
had a Romantic and patriotic view on war. In his poem ‘Soldier’, he glorifies
England and says that he will be proud even if he dies for England.
b). Siegfried Sasson: He
attacked the war lords or officers who ordered soldiers to kill other soldiers.
He thought that war is destructive, pointless and inhuman because it turns
humans into beasts. He also hated the patriotic satisfaction of the people at
home who believed the heroic stories that the government told them about war.
He also hated people who glorified war without understanding the misery and sufferings
of people who went into the battlefield. In his poem ‘Everyone Sang’ he writes
how the end of war brings comfort to everyone.
c). Wilfred Owen: His
poems show very sorrowfully the discomfort, danger and pain of the soldiers,
and the permanent damage which the war did to their minds and happiness. For
him the soldiers who fight from different countries are all humans and their
suffering is same. No one can become a hero by killing fellow humans. In his
poem ‘Strange Meeting’ he imagines a meeting in hell with an enemy soldier he
had killed who reminds him of their common humanity. His another poem ‘Anthem
for the Doomed Youth’ shows the waste of many young men in the First World War
who died as cattles.
d). Isaac Rosenberg: He
also shows the brutality of war in his poem ‘Returning We Hear the Larks’.
► Second World War Poets: These
poets saw the destruction caused by the Second World War. The heroic patriotism
was lost for ever. War did not only kill soldiers it also killed their hopes
and future. The poets wrote demanding the end of all sorts of war. The poets of
the Second World War are:Roy Fuller and Keith
Douglas.
2. Poets who attacked
Modern Civilization:
a). W.B. Yeats: He
was an Irish poet. In his earlier days he wrote poems about Ireland, its people
and traditions. In later days, his poems became more universal in theme. He was
disturbed by the brutality, loss of values and fragmentation caused by modern
civilizations. His major poems are:
An Irish Airman Forsees His Death: In
this poem, the Airman knows that he will die in war which won’t leave any
positive effect for his country. Though he is fighting for the people, actually
it won’t benefit the people and his village.
The Second Coming:
He thought after every 2000 years, the earth gets destroyed and a new era
begins. He envisions that the modern civilization is very near to destruction
because it is about to pass 2000 years and new monotonous types of creatures
will rule this world.
Sailing to Byzantium:
The theme of this poem is that art never dies, it escapes old age, decay and
biological change.
b). T.S. Eliot: He
is one of the pioneers of modern poetry. He was disturbed by the damage, loss
of hope, and fragmentation caused by the two world wars. He thought that belief
on Christianity and submission to God are only means to escape from
fragmentation caused by modern civilization. For him, modern man is sexually
impotent, hollow, fragmented and destroyed. His major poems are:
The Waste Land: This
is a long, complex poem which brings together a group of characters form
different parts of the world and from different times. It gives a true picture
of western civilization where people suffer from emptiness, barrenness, loss of
values, cultural decay. Here Hindu philosophy, Buddhist philosophy and
Christian philosophy are brought together to make people aware that modern man
should find solace from these ancient philosophies. He used fragmentary
technique to show the fragmented man. The ending of this poem is :
Datta.
Dayadhvam. Damyata.
Shantih. Shantih. Shantih.
Four Quartets: In
this poem collection, he claims that God is the only source that will provide
wholeness and purpose to man’s life. Modern people are depressed and fragmented
because they have forgotten the values of religion and God.
c). W. H. Auden: His
earlier poems show a concern for the important political and social events. He
thought that the present situation of politics and social systems need to be
changed. He thought that literature should help social and political change. He
wrote directly about political events and their effect on private lives. His
poems are about depression, unemployment and indifference of human kinds
towards others sufferings. He also hated modern civilization that made humans
like a machine without love and affection. In his poem ‘Museum of Fine Arts’ he
shows how people are indifferent towards others sufferings. In his later years
his poems show that spirituality and belief in Christian values can help humans
to overcome anxiety, loss and depression. He was also like Yeats because he
believed that modern civilization has gone mad because humans have lost faith
in God.
3). Poets who wrote about
nature and natural life:
a). Dylan Thomas: The
language of Dylan Thomas is completely different: full of life, energy and
feeling with great strength and power. His works praise and delight in natural
forces: the life of nature and the countryside, the forces of birth, sex and
death. His poems raise issues completely different from others.
b). Ted Hughes: He is
considered as an animal poet because his most poems are about animals and their
uniqueness. He thought that violence is unconsciously hidden in human and
animal world. He describes the beauty and brutality he saw in nature. Some of
his fine poems are ‘The Pike’ and ‘The Cave Birds’.
……………………………………………………………………………………….
20th Century Novelists
1. Women Novelists
a). Virginia Woolf: She is the leading figure of modern experimental
novel. She also used stream of consciousness technique in her novels to reveal
the true psyche of her characters. Her novels are about loneliness and love.
She was the supporter of women’s rights. Her novels show the psyche of
characters rather than sequences of events in the external world. Her famous
novels are:
To the Lighthouse: This
play presents a family holiday in an island. The youngest son wants very much
to go by boat to the lighthouse but is prevented by his father. The son becomes
very sad. After 10 years the same family goes to visit the same island. The son
visits the lighthouse as ordered by his father. But this time also he is sad
and hates his father. This novel shows the conflict between factual truth and deeper
truth.
Mrs. Dalloway: In
this novel, Mrs. Dalloway invites people to her party, but the people who come
there seem lonelier in the crowd.
Orland: This presents
a main character who begins as a man in the 16th century and
ends as a woman in 1928, still only thirty six years old. On the surface, the
story is fanciful and amusing but it is highly symbolic.
b). Iris Murdoch: Her characters face difficult moral choices in
their search for love and freedom and are often involved in complex networks of
love affairs. Her novels are complex. Her characters struggle with the society
but at last they think that they cannot change themselves and their society.
Her major novels are ‘The Bell’, ‘A Severed Head’ , ‘Under the Net’ and ‘The
Black Prince’.
c). Doris Lessing: She is one of the most politically conscious
women novelists of 20th century. Her characters are unable to
distinguish between the way things appear to be and the way they really are.
Much of her works are concerned with the everyday and inner lives of sensitive
women. She wrote psychological novels exploring the madness of characters and
their deeper self-analysis. Her major novels are:
The Grass is Singing: This
novel is set in southern Africa. It explores the mind of the wife of a poor
white farmer and her difficulties that lead to her destruction.
Children of Violence: This
novel is about Martha Quest who tries to isolate herself from the old ideas of
the society, politics and religion. She lives by her own beliefs and ideals.
The Golden Notebook: It
is a powerful attempt to write honestly about women’s lives and beliefs and the
pressures that political and social events in 20th century life
and society put on them. The male characters in the novel often try to hurt
females because they themselves are weak.
d). Margaret Drabble: Her main characters are always women, and they
are often women who are studious and intelligent. Before joining literary
career, she had been an actress on the theatre. She is often called the
“women’s novelists”. She explores the theme of feminism, search for identity,
equal rights, freedom and justice. Her characters are confused women who try to
integrate the family life and her career. Her major novels are:
The Milestone: It
is about a girl who has avoided any deep feelings or close relationships with
other people. She finds that she is brought into the world of human feelings by
her love for her child.
The Waterfall: It
is about a poetess, who is unable at the beginning of the novel to connect body
and mind. She is saved from the coldness of her life by sexual love, and is at
last able to understand herself and her personality as a woman.
The Ice Age: This
novel presents a wider picture of an unhappy world in which the coldness of the
spirit and the feelings that comes when people only live in one part of their
personalities is shown as a danger to the whole society.
2). Detective novelists (
Spy novelists):
The detective novels are based on mystery,
suspense and murder. The main character goes in search of finding the murderer,
robber or something lost. The main character has to disguise in order to find
the murderer or to solve the mystery. The detective novelists are Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle, Agatha Christie and John Le Carre. Agatha Christie’s famous
detective novel is ‘The Mysterious Affair of Styles’ and John Le Carre’s famous
novel is ‘The Spy Who Came in from the Cold’.
3). Science fiction:
Science fiction is generally described as
stories based on developments in science or technology, either existing
developments or fictional developments of the future. Early science fiction
falls into three main areas/ themes / categories:
E Pessimistic View: Some writers
were afraid of the rapid developments of science and technology. They thought
that scientific developments puts in danger to future of man and this world.
E Neutral View: Some
writers thought that developments of science are both boon and curse. They
raised the question what may happen after man has defeated the problems of war,
disease and poverty. They may go beyond the limits of human body and gain some
qualities of machines.
E Optimistic View: Some
writers were in favour of rapid advancement in science and technology. They
thought that although man may have lost something of natural life on earth,
they can explore the world of space.
a). Arthur Clarke: His books take an optimistic view of
technological progress. His novels and stories often focus on space travel and
other ways in which technology will shape the future. In his novel, ‘The City
and the Stars’, the struggle between man and the machine is shown. His another
novel ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ takes up the subject of exploration in space.
b). George Orwell: His
‘Nineteen Eighty-Four’ is also a science fiction in which he shows how the
advancement of all watching T.V would help to limit the freedom of people.
c). H.G. Wells: He
was very interested in the scientific advances of his age and looked ahead to
imagine what the results might be in future. He was optimistic about scientific
advances although he was conscious of possible dangers. He also shows the
struggle between humans and non-humans.
d). Doris Lessing: Her
most of the novels are science fiction. She describes the world after it has
been almost destroyed. Her famous science fiction is ‘The Four-Gated City’.
4). Other Novelists:
a). Rudyard Kipling: He
was born in India and spent much time there but later moved to England. His
novels project his ideas that English and England are superior to others. His
novel ‘Kim’ presents an Indian boy named Kim who is born of foreign parents.
Kim helps the agent of British Empire to acquire some secret papers from the
Russians. His another novel ‘The Jungle Book’ is about a boy who is raised by
wolves. He lives in the remote areas of India but later leaves the jungle in
order to become a man.
b). E.M Forster: He
presented new ideas about people and society. He was a humanist writer. Though
he was a British, he attacked the British government for its inhuman treatment
to Indians. He attacked the false and pretentious behaviour of people. He
thought that society should be free from materialistic attitude to achieve
harmony and understanding. His famous novels are:
Where Angles Fear to Tread:
Howard’s End: This
novel shows the conflict between spirituality and materialism. He attacks the
people who are running towards wealth and false appearance. The people are
judged by society as failure may indeed be more successful than others. Success
is not marked by money and wealth but by goodliness, humanity and spirituality.
c). D.H. Lawrence: His
works express the inner qualities of human nature. His novels have an influence
of psychological theories of Sigmund Freud. His works analyze the human
relationship in depth. He shows how the relationship between people is always
changing. He analyzes the relationship between man and his environment, the
relationship between the generations, the relationship between man and woman,
the relationship between instinct and intellect. His major novels are:
Sons and Lovers: This
is a thinly autobiographical novel. This novel deals with the conflict between
Paul’s working class father and his middle-class mother. The mother turns
towards her son for the emotional fulfillment denied to her by her husband. The
novel ends with the death of the mother which gives relief to the son.
The Rainbow:
This novel tells the story of a family through three couples who are of three
generations:
First generation:
(Lydia and Tom): They have a deep and loving understanding of each other and
also communicate with the outside world.
Second generation: (Anna
and Will): They have physical passion for each other but their souls remain
separate.
Third generation:
(Ursula and Anton): They do not love each other but try to force their own wishes
on the other.
d). James Joyce: He
was born in Ireland. He created a completely new style of writing which is
termed as ‘stream of consciousness technique’ or ‘interior
monologue’. This technique allows the reader to move inside the minds of
the characters, and presents their thoughts and feelings in a continuous
stream. It breaks all the usual rules of description, speech and punctuation.
The works of Joyce are complex, paradoxical with no fixed themes. He brings
history and myth in his novels to give new insights. He wrote realistic novels.
His major novels are:
Ulysses: This novel is
about an artist named Stephen Dedalus who wants to free himself from this cruel
world. The titles and characters of this novel are connected with and reflect
characters and events from ancient Greece stories. This novel is funny,
touching, satirical and paradoxical.
The Dead: It
is about a husband who realizes that his wife is in love with another man. But
when he finds that her lover is dead, he finds satisfaction.
Finnegan’s Wake:
e). George Orwell: He
was a political conscious novelist. He attacked all kinds of falsity, barbarism
and corruption in British government. His major novels are:
Nineteen Eighty-Four: This
book describes a future world where word and action is seen and controlled by
the government. The government has developed a kind of television that can
watch the people in their homes. The government changes the language and
teaches them to talk about only those what the government want them to do. This
book provides the pessimistic picture of future government where people’s
feelings and emotions will be controlled by the government.
Animal Farm: It
is a political allegory, which tells the story of political revolution that has
gone wrong. The animals on the farm, led by pigs, drive out their master Jones
and take control of the farm. Soon the purity of their political ideas is
destroyed and they end by being just as greedy and dishonest as the farmer whom
they had driven out.
· Computer
………………………………………………………………………….
Reading Between the Lines
‘Father and Son’ # Cat
Stevens
|
® What is the father’s attitude to his son and
son’s attitude to his father? Which do you more easily identify with? [ Model, 2063 ]
= The father thinks that his son is not a
realist but too much dreamy. He wants to make his son do what he had done in
his times. He wants his son to marry and settle down. He dislikes
his son’s bold desire for a change. He thinks that his son is still young and
ignorant of world affairs.
The son’s attitude towards his father is
negative. He thinks that his father has oppressed him since he began to speak.
He thinks that his father is the obstacle in his progress. He is fed up of with
the father’s conservative and static thinking.
I more
easily identify with the son because the son is bold, independent and wants to
live a life of freedom. He leaves the stable life to fulfill his lofty desire.
Even though he may fail, but he leaves the pleasure and protection of his house
to fulfill his mission.
® Why is father an outsider in the
home?[2061,2063]
= The father is an outsider in the
home because he has denied God in him. He does not share his emotions and
feelings with the family members. He spends much of his time at the mine.
When he comes home, he drinks alcohol to free himself from tiredness and
frustration. Due to his bullying nature and drinking habit everyone treats him
as an outsider.
® Is it common at Paul’s age for
young people to feel they hate their father’s and mother’s or conversely have
a very strong attachment to them?
= Yes, it is common at Paul’s age
for young to feel they hate their parents. This is due to conflict between
teenage psychology and adult psychology. Generation gap also brings conflict
between parents and children.
® The father is presented very
unfavourably. Do you have any sympathy for him? When, and how is it brought
out? [058]
= Yes, we have some sympathy for
him. It is brought out at first when the narrator says, “He would dearly
have liked the children talk to him”. The description of father cobbling,
soldering, sewing, hammering and singing shows that he too has human virtues.
Similarly, his habit of putting
patches on his moleskin trousers without leaving it to be done by his wife
also signals his hard-working behaviour.
® In the extract from
D.H.Lawrence’s Sons and Lovers, Paul’s father is presented in two different
situations. Describe how he is presented. [2060,TU2057]
= In D.H. Lawrence’s ‘Sons and
Lovers’, Paul’s father is presented in two different situations- one
at home in the evening and other during working hours.
In the evening, he comes home being drunk. He scolds everyone and shouts at
them. He does not talk with any one. He becomes an outsider in the home and
is hated by all family members.
But when he is at work or with his
own working people, he is in good humour, happy and always sings. The
children also enjoy working and helping him. He sits absorbed in his own
work. He also puts patches on his moleskin trousers without leaving it to be
done by his wife.
® Why do you think father acts as
he does? Do you feel he realizes what the others think of him? [2064]
= Paul’s father is a collier. He
has to work hard in the mine to feed his family. In the evening he drinks
alcohol to free himself from tiredness and frustration. But when he comes
home he realizes that the other family members do not understand him. So he directs
his frustration and tension towards the family members by being violent
towards them.
I think that he realizes what the
others think of him. He realizes that he is not the part of home. This is the
reason why he becomes so brutal and violent towards them.
|
‘Chicken Soup with
Barley’ #
Arnold Wesker
|
® Do you agree with Ronnie that ‘you can solve
things by talking about them’? Or do you prefer Harry’s reaction? [2059,2063]
= Yes, I agree with Ronnie that we can solve
things by talking about them openly with family members. By talking, we can
make our attitude clear and also will be able to understand other members’
opinions and attitudes. If we do not communicate with others and remain aloof,
it will only increase misunderstanding and mistrust and ultimately damage
family relationships.
® What difference in behaviour do you notice
between Ada and Ronnie? Why do they react so differently?
= Ada wants to avoid the family quarrel while
Ronnie thinks that problems can be solved by discussion. Ada has her own house
and husband, so she does not tolerate the quarrel in the home and leaves away.
Ronnie, who is still at school, has no other place to go. So he tolerates the
family quarrel.
® How would you describe the relationship
between Harry and Sarah? Who seems the stronger?[2062]
= The relationship between Harry and Sarah is
not built on love, co-operation and mutual understanding. Sarah only finds
fault in her husband while Harry does not communicate and help her in her work.
So their relationship is bad.
Sarah
seems stronger than Harry because she bears the responsibility of rearing her
children. Harry is weaker because he is always negligent of family affairs.
®
What similarities and differences do you find between Sarah’s and Albert’s
mother?
=
The similarities between Sarah’s and Albert’s mother are that both of them
are strong women and both show strong attachment towards their children.
The
difference between them is that Sarah’s relationship with her husband is bad
and troublesome while the relationship between Albert’s mother and Albert’s
dead father seemed to be full of love.
®
Do you think Albert would ‘rather stay with’ his mother ? If not why does he
say it?
=
Albert would not stay with his mother but would rather go out and enjoy the
party. He says it to her only to make her believe that he loves her dearly.
He is also emotionally blackmailing her.
®
Albert’s mother uses different stages of emotional blackmail to try to make
Albert stay at home- ‘our game of cards’ is the first. Can you trace the
others? What is the climax of this?
=
Her first emotional blackmail is the game of cards. Then she asks him to put
the bulb in Grandmother’s room. Again she asks him not to mess with girls.
Later she mentions him not to upset his dead father.
I
think that the climax of this emotional blackmail is when she talks about his
dead father and reminds him that he is all she has.
®
Why is Albert’s mother so possessive? [2056]
=
Since Albert’s father is dead, she has no one to share her feelings, emotions
and sorrows. She is afraid that Albert may mess with girls and neglect her
later. So, she is possessive because Albert is the only source of her
emotional fulfillment.
|
® “What’s a mother for?” asks Sarah. How has
she interpreted her role and why? What do you think a mother’s for?
= She
has interpreted her role as a loving mother because she thinks that mother
should help her children whatever way she can. She says to Ada that she will
wash the belongings of her. I think that a mother’s position is higher than
God. She has to love, nurture, protect and help the children in whatever way
she can. She also has to understand the feelings of her children.
® What are the statements of problem given by World
Ecological Areas Programme (WEAP)
?
Or
Why should we preserve Natural Environment?
Or
What will happen if ecology / natural environment / forests are
destroyed?
=
If natural environment or forests are destroyed, we humans will have to face
a terrible tragedy. The life on earth will be near to complete destruction.
The
habitat and way of life of indigenous people will be destroyed. They will
have to move to the crowded towns in search of habitat and job. This will
increase unemployment rate and lead to their systematic pauperization.
Many
species of unidentified plants will be extinct from the earth. This will be
the loss of genetic resources that could provide new foods, medicines, fuels,
textiles etc in the future.
Many
species of animals such as tigers, leopards, gorilla, orang utan etc will be
extinct from the earth. This will also mean aesthetic loss.
It
will increase soil erosion, landslides and ultimately lead to desertification
of most parts of earth. Loss of trees and plants will lead to water shortage,
decrease of soil fertility and increase in pollution.
The
level of Carbon-dioxide in atmosphere will increase but due to lack of
adequate plants, this Carbon-dioxide will not be absorbed sufficiently. This
will cause global warming.
|
® Theme / Analysis of “The Poplar
Field”.
|
The poem “The Poplar Field” written by British
poet William Cowper is a defense of nature conservation. This poem is
remarkable for its celebration of the rural and its nostalgic tone.
The poet finds that the poplar field which he
saw twelve years before is now devastated and barren. The poplars are cut down;
the winds no longer play in the leaves, the black birds have moved to other
places and trees no longer afford him a shade. The trees that once gave him a
shade are laid down and have become his seat.
The
poet then realizes that his years are passing very quickly and one day he will
have to die and lie in the grave. But other trees will not have grown in their
places by then. This sight makes him think that though humans cut down trees
for short-term physical comfort and profit.; they are actually destroying human
life and eternal human pleasures. The poet thinks that pleasures given by
nature are far more superior and eternal than pleasures provided by modern
scientific inventions.
۞Theme / Analysis of Philip
Larkin’s poem “Going, Going”.
= The
poem “Going, Going” written by modern poet Philip Larkin indicates that
modern people, generally English people, are going in the wrong direction. He
is worried about the future of whole of mankind. He thinks that by destroying
natural environment, people of modern world are corrupting their village and
their mind. He predicts that in the near future, England is going to become
the first slum of Europe, full of cheats and tarts.
The
poet had thought that the nature of village would not be destroyed in his
life time. But he is worried to find that nature of the village has been
replaced by concrete and tyres. The businessmen are ready to move
their factories to the serene and beautiful village areas for more profit and
to obtain government grants. Now the city has become like the jungle of
concrete and motor vehicles with only false peoples, tarts and cheats living
in it. The poet thinks that England is going to become a polluted and barren
country.
|
® What similarities and differences do you
find in between Cowper’s and Larkin’s poems?
Or, Compare
and contrast ‘The Poplar Field’ by William Cowper and ‘Going, Going’ by Philip Larkin.
[2056]
= Both the poems are similar in the sense that
they appeal for nature conservation and show the hazards caused by destruction
of environment. Both the poets talk about life and death. Both of them are
worried about future.
Cowper
was a Pre-Romantic poet while Larkin is a modern poet. So, we can find many
differences in their poems. Cowper uses poetic language while Larkin uses
colloquial language. Cowper talks about hazards of deforestation in general but
Larkin talks about hazards of urbanization and scientific invention. Cowper’s
poem is full of romantic and personal feelings while Larkin uses realistic
images and talks about social issues. Larkin thinks that destruction of nature
brings poverty, prostitution and also corrupts the mind of modern people.
۞ Summary of Konrad Lorenz's
"Civilized Man's Eight Deadly Sins"
=
Civilized mankind has forgotten that resources of life on earth are limited.
Many fertile land in US have turned into desert and many animal species have
become extinct due to cutting down of trees. Now the general public have
understood this truth.
By
destroying nature blindly, in fact, man is destroying himself. He will
realize his mistakes if he calculates the loss in terms of money. This
barbarian act actually destroys his own mind.
The
young people will only see ugly and cheap man-made things, so they will not
respect beautiful nature. The city people will not see the clear sky due to
high-building and chemical clouding. The more we are civilized, the uglier we
are making the town and country.
®
Konrad Lorenz believes that ‘this barbarian process damages (man’s) own
mind’. Do you think this is true? In what ways?
=
Yes, I think that Konrad Lorenz’s statement is true. Modern people call
themselves as civilized, but in fact, they are barbaric and savage. They
measure the degree of civilization in terms of economic progress. They cut
trees and destroy environment for more profit and physical comfort. Their
desire for more and more profit makes them depressed and frustrated. So
modern people suffer from many mental illnesses such as depression,
hyper-tension, high-blood pressure etc. Due to this, suicide rate has
increased in most of the industrialized countries. On the other hand, due to
destruction of nature, everything--land, air, water--has become polluted
which has damaged the health of people. Unhealthy body will certainly have an
unhealthy mind.
Thus,
by destroying nature, people are destroying their own mind and their mental
peace.
|
® Summary of Thucydides’ History IV.
In ‘History IV’, Thucydides claims that
everybody knows the evils of war but still they go to war. One side wages war
thinking that profit is more than loss. The other side also engages in war
thinking that it is better to face danger than accept an immediate loss.
= In William Shakespeare’s “Henry
V”, King Henry advises his army to fight bravely with their enemies just like
their brave ancestors. Before the battle of Agincourt, King Henry encourages
his army to imitate the action of the tiger, to make eyes like cannon, to
stiffen their muscles, to set the teeth tight and to stretch the nostrils
wide. They should fight to save their country England, their King and the
glory of their ancestors. King Henry’s advice is full of nobility, patriotism
and pride for the motherland.
|
® Would you fight for your country or for your
beliefs? What would motivate for you to fight?
= I think that our country is more important
than our beliefs. We Nepali have different opinions and doctrines but our
country Nepal is our collective identity. First of all, I would fight for my
country because if there were no Nepal, I would not be called Nepali. Foreign
countries may attack us and enslave us if we will not fight for the country. I
would also fight for my beliefs but my fight would be peaceful.
My
spirit of nationalism would motivate me to fight for the country.
What arguments does Churchill give
in favour of going to war? [2058]
OR, ۞ How does Churchill associate
victory in the war with survival? [2059]
=
Winston Churchill, in his speech to the House of Commons, during the Second
World War, claims that their main policy is to wage war against the monstrous
tyranny that has become their enemy. He has a patriotic view on war. He
thinks that their main aim is to gain victory at whatever costs because
without it there is no survival for British Empire and the values that
British Empire has stood for.
|
۞What
difference can you notice between Henry's and Shannon's attitudes to war?
[2061]
= In Frederic Forsyth's "Dogs of
War", Shannon is in favour of war for personal gain. War will provide him
money and job. He does not like peace because it will make him jobless and
without profit. In William Shakespeare's drama "Henry V", King Henry
advices his army to go to war to protect their country, their King and the
glory of their ancestors. King Henry is in favour of war for the benefit of the
nation and to save the nation from enemies but Shannon is in favour of war for
personal benefit.
۞Why does Shannon consider peace would be
nasty?
= Shannon is one of the 'dogs of war' who
wants war for personal benefit. He wants war for job and profit. He does not
want peace because it will make him jobless and without economic benefit. So he
considers peace would be nasty.
۞ Theme / Analysis of "Anthem
for Doomed Youth" by Wilfred Own.
=
"Anthem for Doomed Youth" written by British poet Wilfred Owen is
an anti-war poem that presents the grim reality of war. The title suggests
the waste of many youths in the First World War. He juxtaposes church rites
for the dead with the demented noise of bomb and shells.
The
poet claims that soldiers die as cattles in the war, so it is useless to
mourn, hold prayers or ring bells for them. The soldiers only hear the loud,
demented rattle of bombs and guns in the war. There is no use of lighting
candles for the dead soldiers because now they cannot come back. Their tearful
eyes have already said goodbyes. The girls' brows will be their
coffin cloth and their sorrowful minds will be their flowers. And in every
dusks there will be more dead soldiers coming to the funeral.
He
hated the patriotic satisfaction of the people who did not understand the
misery of the soldiers.
|
۞Summary of “Our Bodies Ourselves” published in
Boston Women’s Health Collective.
= The social structure and power relationships
affect all human relationships. If we feel powerless, we are likely to be in
stress and strain. This stress and strain need outlets; otherwise we will
suffer from depression and frustration.
Men channel out their stress by walking out of
the house or by using physical violence against their wife and family. On the other
hand, women cannot leave their home, so they often direct their violence
towards their children. Generally, their violence is against themselves.
Therefore, twice as many women as men suffer from depression.
This is because women are powerless in many
legal and economic cases. They get low wages, the home is in the name of
husband, and they are considered responsible for the care of their children.
Women only leave their home when they find that their children are in mental
and physical danger from their fathers.
۞ Is
the passage "Our Bodies Ourselves" more sympathetic to men or women?
Do you think it is obivious that the passage was written by a woman? [2056 /
2059]
= The passage "Our Bodies Ourselves"
published in Boston Women's Health Collective is more
sympathetic to women.
The author of this passage has focused on the
difficulties and problems of women. The author describes how the females suffer
from frustration and depression because they cannot channel out their mental
pain due to social or legal prejudice. It is clear that the author is a woman
when in the fourth paragraph she writes “Many women do not have the ultimate
sanction: we cannot easily leave home”. Throughout the passage she has
used ‘they’ and ‘he’ to refer males and ‘we’ and ‘us’ to refer females.
۞ Do you think Patmore is serious when
he says- 'A woman is a foreign land". Is he right? Do you think men and
women have fixed attitudes or standard ideas to each other? [2056-15]
= I think that Patmore is not serious. He is
ironic towards the females when he says 'A woman is a foreign land'.
I think that he is not right because women are
also like males. There is no difference between males and females because both
have same sense organs and both good and bad qualities. The women should also
be looked as fellow humans. Neither men nor women should judge the other sex
negatively.
I think that both men and women have fixed
unchanging attitudes towards the other sex. Men think that women are weaker
sex, complex, objects that should be controlled, fashion-crazy, ignorant,
immoral, sex dolls and inferior beings. Similarly, women also think that males
are arrogant, immoral, oppressive, brutal and complex. Men think that women
should be confined to the four boundaries of the house and should do all the
household activities. They think that women should love, honour and obey their
husbands. Similarly, women think that all the outside activities should be done
by men. They should protect and earn money for the family.
® How would the modern feminist react towards
Ian McEwan’s description of women in “Dead as They Come”, and why?
= The speaker in Ian McEwan’s “Dead as They
Come” has negative fixed attitude towards women. The speaker claims that he
does not care for posturing women, but at the same time describes the different
postures of the woman he loved. He later says that clothes are peripheral to
beauty, but at the same time he gives the details of all the clothes she wore.
The speaker then says that he loved her but soon his ‘superior male ego’ is
seen when he says that to possess her he has to buy her.
Modern feminist would react violently towards
the negative description of women in this extract. They would attack the
speaker’s notion that women are only consumer goods that can be sold or bought
by money. Here the woman is presented as an inanimate doll that can be
controlled and possessed at the will of males. The woman is judged not from her
behaviour, conduct, talent, human feelings but from her physical beauty,
postures and clothes. The speaker who had already divorced three wives thinks
that all women can be bought by money. Modern feminist would strongly condemn
the arrogance of the speaker who has marginalized women as weaker sex, sex
dolls, fools, consumer goods, inferior beings and the object that should be
controlled.
® What aspects of the woman make her suitable
for such a ‘superior man’? [2060]
In McEwan’s “Dead as They Come” the speaker
has negative fixed attitude towards women. His beloved’s physical beauty, her
artistic postures and clothes makes her suitable for such a ‘self-explained
superior man’.
® Summary of William Shakespeare’s “Othello”.
= In William Shakespeare’s drama “Othello”,
Emilia argues that wives learn the lessons of immorality from their husband’s
immoral behaviour. She says that both men and women have same sense organs,
same sexual urge and both good and bad qualities. She wants the husbands to
respect, love, co-operate and understand their wives. She further claims that
if husbands have sexual relationship with other women, the wives will also
satisfy their sexual urge from other men.
® Do you think George Eliot is judging society
and / or Dorothea? What conclusions do you think she wants us to draw from what
we have heard of Dorothea?
= In my view, George Eliot is judging both
Dorothea and the rigid Victorian society in her novel “Middlemarch”. She wants
to highlight how the male-dominated society suppresses the women and imposes
them the cruel moral rules. Here the society in which Dorothea lives is harsh
and cruel towards women. The society does not evaluate her feelings, love
towards her husband, benevolence, pity, struggle and her spirit but only
negatively evaluate her on the basis of her first and second marriage. Though,
the love between Dorothea and her husband Will, is deep and selfless, the
people like Sir James Chettam think it as a shame.
Since George Eliot is a female writer, she wants
to show us that male-dominated society always judges females in negative terms
as weaker sex, immoral, ignorant, complex and inferior beings.
® Do you think Emilia’s position is compatible
with Coventry Patmore’s?
= Emilia’s position is not compatible
with Coventry Patmore’s. Emilia stresses similarity between man and women but
Patmore stresses differences. Emilia argues that men and women have same sense
organs, body parts and sexual urge while Patmore argues that women are foreign,
complex and inferior to men.
۞ What is authority?
= Authority is always related to power. A
person’s political authority can be measured in terms of what taboos he can
impose on others. Any authority is not absolute. It is again controlled by
higher authority with much power.
۞ What are the different types of
authority that we have to learn to accept? In what ways have you attempted to
react against them, and perhaps to impose your own authority? [2060/2063]
= We have to learn to accept different types
of authority at different places and at different stages of life. In childhood,
we have to learn to accept school authority, parental authority and teacher's
authority. We have to obey the commands of our parents and teachers. Similarly,
when we grow adult we have to learn to accept governmental authority, political
authority, and legal authority. In the office we have to learn to accept higher
official's authority, office authority, organizational authority, legal
authority etc. Similarly, at home we have to learn to accept senior member's
authority, parental authority etc.
I have attempted to react against them by
various ways. I have challenged teacher's authority by complaining their faults
to my guardians and to the head of the school or by running away from school.
Similarly, I have reacted against parental authority by crying, being silent
and running out of the house. I have attempted to react against governmental
authority by revolting against them and being engaged in strikes.
I have also imposed my authority over my
sisters, younger brother and servants by giving commands in loud voice and by
beating or scolding them if they do not follow my orders. The tone of my
language towards them is harsh.
۞ What impression do you have of the
King and Queen? [2062]
= I think they are brutal and tyrannical. They
treat their people as puppets and make fun of them. They even punish them even
if they do nothing wrong.
۞ Do you think the Hatter has any
important 'evidence' to give? [2057]
= I think that the Hatter has not any
important evidence to give. If he had evidence, he would have probably
explained to the King and the Queen. Even the King and the Queen do not want
evidence; they only want to make fun of him.
۞ Why is the Hatter nervous?
= Hatter is nervous because he is afraid of
the court and the power of King and Queen. He is afraid that he will be wrongly
executed by the court.
۞ Teachers / priests / policemen /
entertainers / chairpersons. All of these exercise authority in one way or
another.
a) What is it about their appearance and
general behaviour which enables them to convey this authority?
b) What are the characteristics of the
language they use, and the way they use it? Give examples from your experience.
c) In their use of language, in what ways do
they interact with those over whom they have authority? Do they differ much
from individual to individual? [TU 2056-15]
= a). Teachers use sticks and policeman carry
guns to show their authority. Similarly, entertainers use sticks to control the
animals. Teachers, priests and chairperson look serious. Teachers and policeman
have their own uniform to show their authority.
=b). They use imperative sentences. They
express their authority by insistence, order, threat or by granting permission.
The tone of their speech is usually harsh and commanding.
=c). They interact with those over whom they
have authority by different ways. They use commands, requests, advice,
suggestions, invitations, warnings, promises, threats and offers. Usually the
tone of their language is forceful. Usually they use formal language in their
exercise of authority. Their use of language differs from individual to
individual. Teachers use a great deal of imperatives; priests use classical
philosophical language while policeman use legal clichés. Chairpersons use
formal language in a serious tone.
۞ What are the Thought Police? [2058]
= Thought Police are the
police who would watch over the people and would suppress those who are against
the government. They would watch over people's thought, attitudes, beliefs,
words and actions so that they would not revolt against the government and the
ruler.
۞ Who is Big Brother?
= Big Brother is a tyrannical ruler who would
not give freedom to his people. He is also the symbol of future government that
would closely watch people and suppress their political ideologies.
۞ What is the effect on Winston of the
ever-present watching authority? [2057/2064]
= Winston is greatly troubled
by the ever-present watching authority. He feels himself powerless in the hands
of tyrannical government. He has to control his speech, words, actions and
thoughts and even live in a manner of mental slavery.
۞ What is Catch-22?
=In Joseph Heller’s “Catch
– 22”, Catch-22 is a military law enforced during war or crisis. It
states that junior officers’ should always do what the senior commanding
officer commands them to do. It says that junior officers should
unconditionally obey every order of the commanding officer.
۞ What impression does the passage give
you of Colonel Cathcart? [2057]
= The passage from Joseph Heller’s “Catch-22”
leaves a negative impression of Colonel Cathcart on me. He imposes his
excessive authority and power only for his self-esteem. He is a prejudiced
officer who even hates all men outside his group. Actually he is corrupted by
power and does not understand the problems, feelings and emotions of his junior
soldiers.
۞ What differences do you see between
the authority of Big Brother and the authority of Colonel Cathcart? [2060-15]
= Big Brother is all powerful. He is the
symbol of future ruler who would try to control the people by controlling their
thoughts and words. He wants to become an absolute ruler with no limitation of
power. But, Colonel Cathcart is not all powerful because he has other senior
officials who can limit his power. Big Brother wants to control even the words,
thoughts and actions of the people. He even strictly watches discussion between
people. But, in the authority of Colonel Cathcart, junior and senior officials
can hold discussions. The authority of Big Brother is gloomy and deadly while
the authority of Colonel Cathcart is temporary and less gloomy. The authority
of Big Brother indicates the authority of the tyrannical government while the
authority of Colonel Cathcart indicates the strict military atmosphere during
war or crisis.
۞Theme / Analysis of Emily Dickinson's
"Nobody".
= In her poem "Nobody" Emily
Dickinson thinks that she is 'Nobody' because she is quite different from
others whom the society thinks as great people. She does not like to be
"Somebody". She does not like to be what the society wants her to
be. She wants to be unnoticed by the society because society always
cares name, fame, popularity and outward appearance. She is an aloof
personality.
She thinks that being Somebody is like being a
frog in the bog. The frog only makes loud noise to attract the attention of
other but that noise has no meaning.
۞ Who are 'they'? Why do you think
'they'd advertise'?
= They are the people of the society. They are
the people who are thought as great and popular in the society. They are the
people following the codes of society.
They would advertise because they would want
to prove themselves great by showing them. They would advertise them because
they would think them as quite unique and abnormal.
۞ Do you consider yourself a 'Nobody'
or a 'Somebody'? [2061]
= I consider myself as "Somebody". I
want to be known to the society. I want to participate in other people's
sorrows, grief and happiness. I don't want to remain aloof. I want to change
according the rules and norms of the society.
۞What makes a frog ‘public’ in the month of
June?
= The frog is like a public in the month of
June because at this time they croak a lot. They shout a lot to show their
worth. Though they shout a lot to show their greatness, they are completely
valueless.
۞Why does the poet like to be 'Nobody'? [2057]
= [Write the theme of the poem.]
۞ Being fed up with the scorn, noise
and meaninglessness of the world, what does the poet long for?
[2057] OR
۞ Why does he want to be return to
his childhood? Is this just an idealistic dream, or do you think he can
recover some of his lost innocence?
[2060/2062] OR
۞Summary
of John Clare’s “I am”.
|
= The poet John Clare in his poem “I am”
is fed up with the scorn, noise and meaninglessness of the world. He longs to
return to childhood, to sit with the God, to walk where no one has ever walked
and where there is no trouble.
He thinks that no one cares him, no one
understands his sorrows, and no one truly loves him. He thinks that his dearest
ones have become stranger to him. He wants to escape from the problems and
pressures of the world. He is quite unhappy because people have become
indifferent towards his tragedy.
۞How does the poet assert his identity and
existence? [2059]
= The poet asserts his identity by saying that
though he is, no one cares and understands him. Even the title of the poem “I
am” shows that he wants to assert his identity.
Summary of W.H. Auden’s “ Musee
des Beaux Arts”
|
= In his poem “Musee des Beaux Arts”, W.H
Auden shows how life goes on indifferent to a crisis or one person’s tragedy.
The poet uses a painting by Brueghel where Icarus is half-drowned in the sea to
show that man is indifferent to other sorrows and tragedy.
The poet says that the old painters and old
scholars were never wrong because they knew that being indifferent to other
sorrows is a human position. When old people are waiting their death and want
the miraculous birth of Christ, the young’s do not care, nor do they want it
because they are happy in their own playful world. The old masters or old
scholars never forgot that even once powerful and great has to surrender before
death.
He then says that in the painting of Brueghel
everyone turns blind eye to the disaster of Icarus. The ploughman may have
heard the cry of Icarus but for him it was not important to save him. Even the
nature was in its own course. The sun shone as usual. The expensive ship may
have seen the falling body of Icarus but it had to sail to its own destination.
So, it sailed calmly away.
۞ Who are ‘they’? What did they
understand, and never forget?
= ‘They’ referred in the poem “Musee des Beaux
Arts” are the ancient masters, old painters or ancient scholars.
They understood that being indifferent to other
sorrows and tragedy is a human position. No one cares the sorrows, pains and
sufferings of other people. Everyone is engaged in his / her own personal
benefit and own world. They understood that when old people chant the name of
Christ the young people only care their own playful world. When one suffers, he
is alone in his tragedy.
۞What do you think the ‘miraculous birth’ might
be?
= The ‘miraculous birth’ might be the birth of
Christ. The old people wait for the miraculous birth of Christ because they
remember God only when they are about to die. In other words, the old want to
be born again. They want to rise again like the Christ who had resurrected
after his death.
۞The worst sin towards our fellow creatures is
not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them; that’s the essence of
inhumanity. Discuss [2064-15]
= Indifference means showing lack of interest,
feeling or reaction towards something or somebody. Man is by nature a social
animal. Man cannot live by bread alone. He needs emotional fulfillment. He
needs someone with whom he can share his emotions, feelings, sorrows and
sentiments.
A man cannot live a lonely life. Man
needs a society where he is sometimes loved and sometimes hated. In a family,
if parents scold and beat their children, the children do not feel so much bad.
They feel much worse when their parents do not participate in their sorrows and
feelings or when their parents are indifferent towards them. There are various
types of people in the society- beggars, poor, handicapped etc. They have to be
helped. If we are indifferent towards their sorrows and sentiments and do not
interact with them, it is a worst crime. Being indifferent breaks the heart of
people. So, it is worst crime than hating.
۞ Why did the animals revolt? [2062/2056]
= Mr. Jones and his keepers did not care the
animals in the shed. The keepers had milked the cows and had gone to hunt
rabbits without feeding the animals. Even in the evening no one cared the
animals. When they tried to quench their hunger by breaking the store-shed,
they were severely beaten. So, the animals revolted because they
could not tolerate their hunger.
۞ Do you think the animals’ reaction
was justified? [2057-15]
= Yes I think that the animals’ reaction was
justified. The basic need of all living creatures is food. Living beings cannot
live without food. In George Orwell’s novel “Animal Farm”, the animals are not
properly cared and fed by the masters and the keepers. They only milk the cows
but do not feed them properly. The animals revolted only when their life was in
danger. Even when they tried to go to the store-house to quench their hunger,
they were severely beaten by their master. So, they had no other option than to
revolt. This shows that even animals unconsciously revolt when there is danger
of their life.
۞Decide on possible reasons for Orwell’s making
his rebels animals. Why not human beings?
= In his novel “Animal Farm”, George Orwell
chooses animal characters to show that rebellion is necessary when there is
threat of life and freedom. Actually this is a political allegory. He wants to
say us that rebellion is not done by brain or in a pre-planned way. Rebellion
bursts itself if the basic needs of the citizens are not fulfilled by the
government. From this novel, he wants us to show us that even animals
unconsciously revolt when there is danger of their life.
۞ How does the extract describe the
battle between the Powers of Heaven and Hell? [John Milton, “Paradise Lost”]
2058-15
=
In his epic “Paradise Lost”, John Milton describes how Satan and his
followers revolted against God and the angels of Heaven.
In
this extract Abidel is in favour of God. He says to Satan
that it is better to serve in Heaven than rule in Hell. He does not like the
rebellion of Satan against God. He says that Satan is not fit to become the
master because no one can be as great as God. Abidel then raises his weapon
and hits on the head of Satan. Satan can not protect himself, so he turns ten
steps backward. Soon war is announced on both sides. The angels of God also
want to fight against Satan while the Satan and his followers are also ready
to defeat God. Michael sounds the trumpet to announce the battle. Soon there
is loud noise in Heaven. The chariots start running towards the battle field.
Several arms are thrown to kill the Satans. The sounds of the weapons and the
cry of the wounded armies is heard every where. On both sides armies are
willing to kill their enemies.
|
۞Macbeth, in Shakespeare’s play, is on the
point of committing the ultimate act of rebellion. Now give answer
for: [2061]
a). What is the ultimate act of rebellion?
b). What reasons does Macbeth give for not
killing Duncan?
c). What is the only reason he has for killing
Duncan?
d). Will the action of killing Duncan be over
quickly, or will it have consequences?
Answers:
a).= Macbeth’s ultimate act of rebellion is to
kill King Duncan who has come to his castle as a guest. He wants to kill him
and become King himself.
b). = Before killing Duncan, Macbeth also
thinks that Duncan should not be killed because of two reasons. The first
reason is that King Duncan is his relative and the virtuous King loved by all.
The second reason is that King Duncan has come as a guest in the castle of
Macbeth. He also thinks that killing Duncan will anger the God and angels of
the God; and he will be punished for his crime.
c). = The only reason Macbeth has for killing
Duncan is his terrible ambition, that is, his passion for power and glory.
d) = The action of killing Duncan will not be
over quickly. It will have consequences. The murderer will not live in mental
peace. He will be punished for his crime in this earth. The man who lives by
the power of sword will be killed by the sword. Killing of Duncan will anger
the powers of Heaven and punish Macbeth.
۞ Why does Shakespeare make the
contrast between angels and damnation? [2058]
= In William Shakespeare’s “Macbeth”, King
Duncan is a virtuous king while Macbeth is a cruel, selfish and power-mad king.
The angels’ represent the goodness and simplicity of King Duncan while
damnation represents the evilness and cunningness of Macbeth. By making
contrast between angels and damnation, William Shakespeare wants to show us
that deeds and names of virtuous person are always heard by angels and Gods while
the evils done by anyone will have its consequences in the hell.
۞ Do you think Macbeth killed King
Duncan? Give reason. [2065]
= Yes, Macbeth killed King Duncan because
Macbeth was blind with his terrible ambition. He had the desire to become the
king. On the other hand, it was very easier to kill King Duncan because he was
in the castle of Macbeth. Even no one would suspect Macbeth for the murder
since he was the relative of the King.
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۞ Summary of Bertrand Russell’s
“Autobiography”.
Or,
How do love and knowledge lead Russell upward? [2058]
Or,
In what way does Russell find life to be worth living? [2059]
Or,
List the three passions that governed Russell’s life. [2064]
=
In his “Autobiography”, Bertrand Russell writes that three passions have
governed his life: the longing for love, the search for knowledge,
and pity for the suffering of mankind.
He
thinks that love brings ecstasy, it frees us from loneliness. Heaven is
created out of love. Poets and saints imagine Heaven as the model of Love. He
thinks that knowledge is necessary to understand the hearts of men and laws
of nature. Love and knowledge lead upwards to the heaven.
Russell
thinks that pity had always brought him back to earth. He feels pity towards
the people who suffer from famine, oppression, loneliness and poverty. Pity
is the greatest human virtue. Russell says that he would devote his whole
life for these three passions and make his life worth-living.
|
۞ Summary of Dylan Thomas’ “ A Refusal to Mourn
the Death, by Fire, of a Child in London”.
= The
poet says that he will not mourn for the death of the child because man is made
in darkness and ultimately goes to darkness. It is a grave truth to die. There
is no greater truth than death. No one can stop it. The sea is still and does
not mourn for the death of the child. The poet will meet her in heaven after he
will also die. So he thinks it useless to mourn for her death. For him, death
is not an end. It has continued since the beginning of the world. But after
death, we again enter to life. There are long friends of dead because from the
very beginning of the world infinite numbers of people have died.
۞Discuss why ‘Telescopic Philanthropic’
is an opposite title for the chapter. OR
۞ How many individual examples of Mrs.
Jellyby’s neglect can you
find? OR
۞ What is Charles Dickens criticizing
in the passage of ‘Bleak House’. [2060]
= Charles Dickens is criticizing the duplicity of
humans. He is criticizing the behaviour of Mrs. Jellyby who has a false ideal
to help the natives of Borrioboola-Gha. She is busy in her African project.
In fact, she does not care her own house and children. She wants to raise her
social impression, but she is negligent of family affairs. Her house and room
are dirty, filled with papers and litters. Her children are untidy, dirty and
with out proper clothes. Her house has no proper lights. She does not show
her motherly love when one of her child falls from the stairs. The
furniture’s are broken. She does not comb her hair and even her dresses are
not good. The children are unhealthy and thin. They have no slippers on their
foot.
This chapter is titled ‘Telescopic Philanthropic’
to show how people like Mrs Jellyby only look farther away like a telescope
without concentrating on their homes. They try to show that they love
humanity only to raise social status. They neglect other humans nearer and
around them.
|
……………………………………………………………………………….
MOSAIC
………………………………………………………………………………
PAPER #
Calherene Lim
|
What type of house did Tay Soon dream of
buying? [2059]
= Tay Soon dreamed of buying a house with all
the facilities similar to those that were advertised in the glossy pages of
magazines. He had a dream of a beautiful house of his own, the best one; with
aluminum sliding doors, kidney shaped swimming pool, sunken circular sitting
room, timbered ceiling, panelled walls, marble flooring, and amber carpeting.
What role does Tay Soon’s wife play in
contributing to the entire disaster? [2062/ 63 /64 ]
= Tay
Soon’s wife played a major role for his downfall and the entire disaster. She
was a woman who also had a passion for a beautiful house. She used to describe
the dream house of her husband to her sister. She talked endlessly about the
dream house with her husband. She even criticized the house of her
mother-in-law. It was his wife Yee Lian who first gave suggestion to put their
money in the share market. She was excited when the shares rose. She even asked
her mother-in-law to buy some shares. When their shares started falling, her
husband asked her if they should sell the shares, she refused it saying that
the decline was only a temporary one. When the share market started falling,
she even advised him to put all the remaining shares into the OHTE and West
Parkes. These two markets crashed. Tay Soon went mad and later died of this
shock. Thus Tay Soon’s wife can be considered as the important agent who
brought the entire tragedy.
WET SATURDAY
|
۞ Why does Mr. Princey detest his
family? [2059/65]
= Mr Princey is a selfish man who values his
name, fame, self-esteem and identity than the family. His house is ill-managed
because he does not give priority to the family bonds. He is a showy character.
He only wants to walk outside, never smiling. He detests his hulking son. He
hates his daughter Millicent because she has killed Withers. He is afraid that
his prestige in the village will be damaged if she is sent to madhouse and
charged of crime.
۞ Do you take the story “Wet Saturaday”
as a tragic or comic one? Why ? Give reasons. [2060]
= There is no doubt that the story “Wet
Saturday” written by John Collier is a tragic one. It is because lives of
several innocents are destroyed. An innocent man Withers is killed by
Millicent. Captain Smollet falls in the cruel trap of Mr. Princey. He is
cruelly beaten and we can guess that Captain Smollet will be charged of crime
that he has not committed. If he will be proved guilty, he will be hanged to
death. In this story, the truth is overshadowed by falsehood. The plan of Mr. Princey,
a selfish and cruel man, becomes successful. The setting is gloomy. The rain
falling outside symbolizes the tears falling down from the eyes of several
innocents. The lives of three innocents are ruined in this story- Withers,
Smollet and Ella Brangwyn-Davies. The house of Mr. Princey is like a
devil’s house because all the family members who live in that house do not
value human sentiments. They are selfish and brutal. They charge Mr. Smollet
for the crime committed by Millicent. Even bonds of love, humanity and human
emotions is lacking there.
۞ 'Wet Saturday' is a psychological
story. Explain. [2065]
Wet
Saturday is a psychological story in the sense that it shows that humans are no
less savage than animals. This story shows how civilization is only a mask worn
by humans. Psychologists claim that all humans are guided by their id / ego
i.e quest for power, sex, prestige and wealth. Here the family of
Millicent is guided by their ego to protect the prestige of their family.
Millicent does not even hesitate to kill Withers, her lover. Similarly all the
family members unite and brutally beat Captain Smollet and charge him for the
crime done by Millicent. This story shows the dark and selfish side of man's
psychology.
THE ELEPHANT
|
۞What relation do you find between the
character of the zoo director and the condition of the animals he chooses to
exhibit? [2059]
= From the condition of the animals in the
zoo, we can guess that the zoo director is a selfish and greedy man who wants
to get promotion by unfair means. He is a corrupt official. In his zoo, the
giraffe has a short neck, the badger does not dig holes and the whistler
whistles unwillingly. This shows that either the animals are duplicate ones or
they are malnourished. He does not know the educational significance of the
animals kept at zoo. So, he plans to keep the rubber elephant in the zoo
instead of keeping the real elephant. He only values number than quality. So,
his zoo has got three thousand rabbits but not an elephant.
۞How does the way the elephant will be
constructed, what it will be filled with and how it will be labeled satirize
the governmental bureaucracy in Poland? [061]
= The
rubber elephant is the symbol of political propaganda. Similarly, the zoo
director is the symbol of bureaucracy of Poland. It seems real to the people
but on keen examination proves to be false and duplicate. The zoo director says
that the rubber elephant will be filled by air and painted properly. Since it
will not move, they will keep a notice on the railing saying that this
particular elephant is particularly sluggish. This plan shows that the
bureaucracy of Poland thinks the people as puppets. They think that general
public cannot understand what is true and what is false. They think that
general public can be easily cheated. The rubber elephant is hollow inside
which shows that the promise of bureaucracy of Poland is hollow. The
development of the country is like the elephant which will shake even on slight
disturbance.
THE VALVET HANGOVER
|
۞ What is the significance of Havel’s
statement that ‘the poetry was over and prose was beginning’? [2063]
= Vaclav Havel became the president of Czechoslovakia
after the smooth transition of power from the Communists. Havel thinks that
before coming into power they had only dreamt of a beautiful nation but now
they have to prove it. Poetry is melodious and lyrical while prose does not
have the charm and melody. Poetry is like a sweet dream while prose is like the
ugly reality. In the time of struggle, they were happy because they had a
beautiful dream and plans for the country. But now they have various challenges
in the new democracy. The country can go in wrong direction at any time.
Planning for the future is simple but putting that plan into action is a
difficult task. So, Havel says the poetry of planning was over and prose of
action was beginning.
۞ What are some of the disadvantages
facing the new democracy as described by Havel in “The Velvet Hangover” ?
[2056]
= Havel thinks that the new democracy in
Czechoslovakia can ambush the country if not properly handled. He fears that
the three dangers his newly democratic country is likely to face are – rise
of national conflict, loss of social –welfare
protections, and rise of new totalitarian
government controlled by money and money-minded people.
The people of democratic nation have more
personal freedom, so they may forget their social responsibility. The greatest
danger to democracy is the mob rule. Even the money minded business community
may try to buy the politicians and take control of the government. If democracy
is not properly handled it is worse than totalitarian government.
A SMALL PLACE
|
۞What does the different treatment of customs
officials towards tourists and Antiguans suggest?[2057]
= The different treatment of customs officials
towards tourist and Antiguans suggests that the government of Antigua is
corrupt. This also suggests that poors’ are hated and cheated everywhere, even
in their country. The customs do not check the bags of tourists that may
contain valuable items like camera, computers etc. They check all the luggage
of the Antiguans which contains cheap clothes and foods brought to their
relatives. This is because it is easier to cheat poors than rich people. The
customs officials have slave mentality. Even after independence they think
whites as their masters.
۞ How do the tourists’ expectations
differ from those of the local people? [2058]
= Local people expect rain because they are
fed up of with heat. While the tourists do not want rain because it will spoil
their holidays. Locals want libraries, schools and hospitals. But
the tourists do not want them because they stay there only for few days. Rather
they want beautiful cars, hotels and want to see the ruined monuments. The
natives want to see their shores clean and beautiful while the tourists only
want pleasure and comfort. They are not worried even if their discarded filth
pollutes the environment.
Summary of Jamaica Kincaid’s “A
Small Place”.
|
۞ In her essay “A Small Place” Jamaica Kincaid
reveals the vast gap between the everyday life of Antiguans and the people who
visit the island. In fact, by attacking the tourists, she is also attacking the
corrupt government of Antigua.
Antigua, a beautiful and sunny island, is
often visited by tourists. A tourist who would visit it would first land on the
airport that is named after the Prime Minister. The tourist would easily pass
through the customs without being checked while the Antiguans coming after
working in other countries with cardboard full of cheap clothes and foods for
relatives would be checked completely.
Outside the airport, brand new Japanese car
will be available. But the drivers would try to cheat the tourists. The driver
who may even not have his license will drive the car carelessly. The brand new
car will make an awful sound because it is filled with leaded petrol. The
driver who drives a brand new and highly expensive Japanese car will actually
have a very poor house. Government gives loans for cars but not for houses
because the two main cars’ dealership is owned by the Ministers of the
Government. Schools in Antigua are poorly managed. They look like
latrines. Antiguans do not trust the doctors in the hospital of
Antigua. Even the Minister of Health and other Ministers go to New York for
their check-up. The only library in Antigua had collapsed in the 1974
earthquake, and still its repair is pending. The American Embassy is taller
than the government offices. The house of a merchant whose family came from the
Middle East is splendid. When they had come to Antigua 20 years ago they used
to sell goods door to door from suitcases carried on their backs. Now they are
richer than the government. The house of a smuggler is also very tall and
splendid. When the Queen of England came to visit Antigua in 1985, the roads
were paved anew to give her false impression that riding in a car in Antigua is
a pleasant experience. This indicates the double standard of the government.
Another lady Evita is also very rich and powerful because she is the girlfriend
of one of the government official. The food for tourists comes from Miami which
were actually grown in some parts of Antigua and were sent to Miami for
processing.
The author then says that tourists are ugly
person and local Antiguans hate them. The tourists do not expect rain because
it will spoil their holiday in Antigua while the local people want rain. The
tourists do not understand the corruption and colonial past of Antigua because
they are absorbed in their self-centered pleasures and self-worth. The tourists
are unaware that their discarded filths spoil the water of Antigua. Local
people do not like the lifestyle of the tourists, their gestures, and their
high fashion. The tourists are actually unnoticed by the people. The people
feel envy towards them and their riches.
THE LETTER ‘A’
|
۞ Summary of Christy’s Brown’s
“The Letter A”
In his autobiography “The Letter A” Christy
Brown describes how he overcame his massive handicap with his will-power, firm
determination and with the continuous effort and love of his Mother.
Christy Brown was born as the tenth child in a
family of twenty-two. When he was four months old, his head would constantly
fall backwards whenever his mother tried to feed him. As he grew older, his
hands were clenched tightly and twisted unnecessarily. He could not even hold
the nipple of the bottle because he could not freely open or close his mouth.
At six months he could only sit by resting his back on the mountain of pillows.
All these signs alerted his mother, so she consulted doctors.
The doctors told her that he was both mentally
and physically defective. But she had a firm belief that her son may be
physically weak but not mentally retarded. She was a woman of firm
determination who loved Christy dearly as her other normal children. Filled by
true motherly love, she tried to take care of him by herself.
Even at the age of five, he could neither sit
nor speak. His every body parts were useless. His mother would show him
pictures of animals and flowers and ask him to repeat them after her. She hoped
that Christy would at least learn and communicate with other people. Even when
her relatives told her not to take the boy seriously, she was determined to
prove that her son was not mentally retarded.
One day a wonderful event changed his life
completely. He was attracted by the yellow piece of chalk that his brother and
sister were writing with in the black slates. He unconsciously grabbed the
chalk out of his sister’s hand with his left foot. He held it tightly between
his toes and wrote carelessly on the slate. Every family member was curious.
When his mother came and saw this, she knelt before him and drew a single
letter “A” on the floor in front of him and asked him to copy it. He tried it
with the chalk. It produced a crooked line. He tried again and drew two sides
of the letter. The chalk broke out. He wanted to give up and throw the chalk.
But due to his mother’s encouragement, he gathered his strength to write the
letter A. When he wrote the letter A, his mother knew that it was a sign of
intelligence and not just an imitative gesture because Christy had done it with
intense effort. So, tears rolled out of her eyes. This had opened
his road to mental freedom. He could express his desires and thoughts through
words. Thus he was able to break the wall between him and other people.
® Theme / Analysis of “Buffalo
Bill’s” / Style of e e cummings in Buffalo Bill’s
|
= The poem “Buffalo Bill’s” written by modern
American poet e e cummings is generally considered as a
unusual but sincere tribute to the legend of the famous American Cowboy,
William Cody. In this poem, the poet has exploited the aesthetic potentialities
of typographical experimentation.
Buffalo Bill, who used to ride a white horse
and break very quickly the clay pigeon targets, is now dead. He was a handsome
man and the poet wants to know how much the Death likes him. Since the poet
capitalizes the initial letters of Buffalo Bill, Death and Jesus, he gives
equal status to all these three. But since he does not capitalize “i”, the poet
thinks that he himself is minor in comparison to legendary figure, William
Cody. The style of e e cummings in “Buffalo Bill’s” is unique. He has not used full
stops, commas and even abandoned the use of capital letter in “i”. He has not used
traditional poetic forms. He has written this poem in free verse with lots of
spacing. The running together of words in “onetwothreefourfive” indicate that
Buffalo Bill shot bullets very quickly without stopping. The words “stallion”
and “Jesus” are slightly separated from the preceding lines to indicate that
Buffalo Bill was as strong as the horse and as kind as Jesus. This poem is
remarkable for its pictorial quality and typographical experimentation.
Some critics also argue that this poem is a
satire on Buffalo Bill. Though he was brave and powerful, he has now been made
powerless by Death.
® Theme / Analysis of “Oh, My Love
Is Like a Red, Red Rose”
|
= “Oh, My Love Is Like a Red, Red Rose”
written by Scottish poet Robert Burns is a romantic love lyric. This poem shows
the ideal love and romantic passion of the poet towards his beloved.
The poet compares his love to a red rose that
is newly sprung in June and to the melody that is sweetly played in tune. He
claims that his love is deep and he will love his beloved till all the seas go
dry and rocks be melted by the sun or till he will be alive. Then, he says
farewell to her and promises that he will return even from ten thousand miles
away.
A Mongoloid Child Handling Shells
on the Beach
|
® What is suggested by the phrase
“unbroken children”?
= The phrase “unbroken children” suggests that
the children are whole or complete in every aspects. All their sense organs and
body parts are complete and perfect. They can play, shout, hear and see perfectly.
By using the phrase “unbroken children”, the poet wants us to contrast them
with the mongoloid child whose body parts and sense organs are not in a healthy
condition.
® How is the child like the sea? How are the
other children like the surf? What do the differences between sea and surf
contribute to Richard Snyder’s poem?
= The poet uses sea metaphor to explain the
mongoloid child while he uses the surf metaphor to present the behaviour of the
other normal children. The sea is calm, slow, mysterious and makes small
change. Similarly, the mongoloid girl is also slow, sober, mysterious and calm.
Likewise, the surf is wild, stormy, noisy and violent; so are the unbroken
children. By using the sea and surf metaphor, the poet wants us to compare and
contrast both handicapped and normal children.
® What is the poet’s attitude towards the
child? How can you tell?
= The poet’s attitude towards the mongoloid
child is sympathetic and full of love. He does not hate her but finds her
lovable and full of potential as the sea. At the same time, he contrasts her
with the violent and wild surf-like normal children.
® Should the poem now be retitled as “A Child
with Down’s Syndrome....” Would that be effective?
= I don’t
think that this poem should be retitled as “A Child with Down’s Syndrome...”.
The word ‘Down’ would suggest that the child is down in every aspect. It would
suggest negativity in the child. The poet in this poem is actually glorifying
the child, so the new title would be bad and will not meet with the poem’s
theme. The word ‘mongoloid’ has several connotative meanings. By using the word
‘mongoloid’ the poet directly gives us the physical structure of the child
making us think that the girl is similar to Mongol race who have small eyes,
flat face, small hands and legs and large head.
® Theme / Significance of the
title of “Dream Variations”.
|
= “Dream Variations” written by black American
poet Langston Hughes is a nostalgic lyric which bitterly expresses the poet’s
wish for a carefree life away from colour persecution and racial
discrimination.
The first stanza describes the poet’s dream to
live a life of freedom in the land where there is no colour persecution. He
wishes to rest in a cool evening beneath a tall tree, where dark night would
come gently.
The second stanza describes harsh reality that
black people has to face in America. In reality, his dream is shattered by
racial prejudice and colour discrimination in America. His dream remains
unfulfilled. He has to live a harsh life, a life of boredom and frustration.
Even the night reminds him of his black colour.
Thus, this poem is entitled “Dream Variations”
suggesting that the dreams of blacks is
not
fulfilled but varies or changes in real life in colour prejudiced American
society. This poem is also an attack on American Dream that America is a land
of freedom and opportunity.
® Write a summary of “Child Care in China”
and compare it with child care in Nepal.
|
= In this essay “Child Care in China”, Bruce
Dollar describes how mother-surrogates play important role in introducing the
values of co-operation, co-ordination, sharing, respect for labour and altruism
in institutionalized child care programmes in China. In China, group activities
are emphasized in all child care centers so that no one becomes a ‘star’.
Chinese children are generally expected to rely on each other for stimulation
rather than inanimate objects. Moreover, children are provided with toys of a
worker, a farmer, or soldier; so that they would show respect towards labour.
The toys are made a bit heavy in order to foster mutual help and co-operation
between them.
Generally, women are selected as nurses or
teachers who show particular interest in children and love them. Credentials
are secondary during their recruitment. The nurses teach the children that
helping and sharing is more important than winning. They do not punish children
when they do wrong. They motivate them and encourage them towards the right
path. Even teachers enthusiastically join with the children in the free play.
Teachers handle the disruptive child cheerfully and patiently with persuasion
and do not make him / her the center of attention.
In Nepal, child care centers or child care
institutions are not properly equipped with toys or play things. Children are
not motivated or entertained but are only made bookworms. Children are severely
punished when they do wrong. Even teachers are not well trained. Children are
taught to be competitive and they are evaluated on the basis of their
individual performances or on the basis of their exams. Generally, group
activities are not emphasized. The nurses / teachers are not properly paid, so
there is no stability of the teachers. Nurses are selected on the basis of
certificates and credentials. There is no uniformity in the child care
institutions in Nepal.
Due to
lack of proper nurturing in child care centers in Nepal, Nepalese children are
becoming more and more selfish, greedy and violent. They show no respect for
labour and for the nation. The family bonds and social bonds are disintegrating
day by day. By adopting the methods and techniques applied in child care
centres in China we can certainly develop mind and body of Nepalese children.
Of Cocks and Men
|
® What taboos do the Balinese have relating to
animals? [2058]
= The Balinese show strong hatred towards any
behaviour regarded as animal-like. They do not allow babies to crawl. They
think that bestiality is more horrible crime than incest. When a boy or girl
becomes adolescent, his / her teeths are filled so that they do not look like
fangs. Defecation and eating in public is regarded as immoral activity because
of its association with animality; so eating and defecation is done hurriedly
and privately. Falling down and clumsiness is also hated for this reason.
® Why is it significant that fighting cocks
receive special care and attention equal to that given to human babies?
[2060/2062]
= In Balinese culture, cocks and cockfighting
reflect male sexual identity or social identity. As the child is the image of
the father, so the cocks are also regarded as the symbol of owner’s self.
People in Bali reflect their ego or superiority by rearing cocks and winning
the cock-fight. Since everything is compared to cock-fights and cocks in Bali,
it is significant that fighting cocks receive care and attention equal to that
given to human babies.