Wednesday, January 30, 2008

My Pretty Rose Tree by William Blake analysis and some of my own

Yet again I am posting one of my school assignments on the blog. This time it I was supposed to analyse a poem of my own choice and also write my own acrostic and constructivist poem. I chose to analyse "My Pretty Rose Tree" by William Blake.

My Pretty Rose Tree

by William Blake
A flower was offered to me,
Such a flower as May never bore;
But I said "I've a pretty rose tree,"
And I passed the sweet flower o'er.

Then I went to my pretty rose tree,
To tend her by day and by night;
But my rose turned away with jealousy,
And her thorns were my only delight.
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“My Pretty Rose Tree” was written by William Blake and is a part of his Songs of Experience collection from 1794.

By the look of it, Blake’s poem seems to follow an iambic tetra metric pattern, meaning that one unstressed syllable is followed by a stressed syllable and there are three feet on each line; if you take a look at the first line in the first stanza, you can see that, e.g., the “flow” in flower is stressed and so is the “off” in offered. A similar pattern is followed throughout the poem.

In this poem the rhymes are masculine; e.g. me, tree and bore, o’er. Besides that, the rhymes follow the ABAB ACAC pattern.

There are two stanzas, and four lines in each, in this poem. It has no significant visual presentation, other than the four-line pattern.

The flower and the rose tree in the poem, symbolize women. The poem is about a man, who is “offered” a woman, but he rejects her because he is already with somebody he loves more than anything; this is what the 1st stanza tells us. In the 2nd stanza, the man tells his woman about the incident, but she apparently becomes jealous and leaves him. This isn’t what we would expect after the 1st stanza, where he chooses her, rather than the other woman. The poem goes from a seemingly happy- ending poem to a tragic one about lost love.

There is a lot of symbolism and personification in the poem. The flowers are given human abilities, e.g. “but my rose turned away with jealousy”, and they are also major symbolical elements. A flower, or rose, is a beautiful thing, but the thorns are sharp and painful. If you are not careful you will be hurt. That’s exactly what happened to the man in the poem: he was stung by the thorn by telling his loved one about the encounter with another woman (“And her thorns were my only delight”).

This poem does, indeed, tell a story and is therefore a narrative poem. The protagonist, if he can be called so, is a man who is in love; the peripheral characters are two women, or flowers for that sake. The story is about the man’s choice between the two women and the outcome of that choice. There is more than one theme in this work of art. One of them is mentioned in the 3rd line of the 2nd stanza: jealousy; the man in the poem is left by the love of his life, because the lady fell into the ocean of jealousy. Another theme is grief or despair. A third theme is love, or lost love, which isn’t that hard to guess.

Constructivist Poem

Brunettes
hot and seductive
abnormally smart
like my own computer
if only I had the cash
- Zlash

Acrostic Poem


Beauty is the word, no I’m not insane
Look out though, there’s not much brain
Oslo has many, but
No, they won’t give you a penny
Dum like me, how can it b
E?
So let us see if they can count to three
- Zlash


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Thursday, January 10, 2008

Analysis of The Simpsons "Fear of Flying" episode

simpsons_fearofflying This was a homework I had. I didn't get top grade on it, but I got the second best.

The Simpsons is an animated American sitcom. It was made by Matt Groening. “Fear of Flying” is the eleventh episode of the sixth season. It was released December 18th, 1994. The Simpsons is an animated TV show (sitcom) and therefore presented in a visual medium.

Setting

The Simpsons takes place in a town called Springfield. As modern technology like planes and cars are included, we can say that this episode takes place in the 90s. Another fact that supports this statement is the movie titles that are mentioned in the episode (Hero, Fearless, Alive). These movies were released in 1992-93.

Construction

This episode of The Simpsons is told both chronologically and retrospectively. The story is seen by an outside observer.

Style/Tone

The story is comical throughout the episode, but there are parts where it is also sad. E.g. When Homer is kicked out of the bar. The tone is joyful when Homer gets the free tickets and when Marge gets through therapy. Marge’s tone is in a worried fashion when Homer tells her about the free tickets.
The bottom line is that the tone varies very much throughout the episode.

Characters

The Simpsons is about a family called, not surprisingly, the Simpsons, who live in a town called Springfield. The family consists of Homer (the dad), Marge (the mum), Bart (the son), Lisa (the daughter) and Maggie (the second daughter).
- Homer Jay Simpson is 34, 36 or/and 38 years old. Homer’s skin is yellow (as most of the characters in The Simpsons are) and he has two strands of hair on his head. You usually see him with a white t-shirt, blue pants and black shoes. Homer works at a nuclear power plant. He can be described as stupid, clumsy and thoughtless.
- Marjorie “Marge” Simpson is the same age as Homer. She has blue hair which stands straight up and she usually wears a green dress, red shoes and an orange pearl necklace. Marge is a housewife. Even though Homer does incompetent things, she always tries to help him out of the problem.
- Bartholomew “Bart” Jojo Simpson is ten years old and is in the 4th Grade. He is usually seen with an orange t-shirt, blue shorts and blue shoes. His hair is blond though you don’t really see his hair. Bart is known as the typical troublemaker and does everything to annoy people through mischief.
- Lisa Marie Simpson is eight years old and goes in 2nd Grade. She is usually seen with an orange dress, orange shoes and a white necklace. Her hair is blond. She is the typical smart kid and is very intelligent. She tries to help out her family as long as she thinks it is for the right reason.
- Margaret “Maggie” Simpson is a baby and is supposedly 1 year old.
Conflict
Marge is fighting her fear of flying which is within herself. She has suppressed it for so long and now it finally comes out. She agrees to attend therapy to find out what has caused this fear.

Plot

In this episode Homer gets kicked out of “Moe’s”, the bar he usually drinks at because of some stupid joke where he loosened the sugar jar, so that it got emptied all over the counter. Homer is disappointed and starts a search for a new bar. On his search, he is mistaken for a pilot and ends up in the pilot seat of a plane. Homer’s stupidity destroys the plane. To make Homer keep silent about this security flaw, the owner of the airlines gives him free tickets to anywhere he wants to go in the United States, except Alaska and Hawaii (which he calls “the freak states”). Marge doesn’t really want to fly anywhere, but agrees in the end. On the plane, just before take-off, she reveals her fear of flying. They get off the plane and Marge goes into therapy. They find out that the fear came from a childhood incident when Marge found out that her father was a steward (flight attendant). Marge is cured of her fear.

Theme and Message

The episode is about fear. Marge had suppressed her fear of flying deep down inside her instead of dealing with it. That didn’t turn out well. The message is that we shouldn’t suppress our fears. We should deal with them, so that we can avoid complications and situations which Marge met. Another theme is that things we go through in our childhood can affect our adult lives.

Intertextualities

There are several intertextual elements in the episode:
- The second bar Homer visits after being kicked out from “Moe’s” refers to the TV show Cheers.
- Homer’s favorite song is “It’s Raining Men” by The Weather Girls.
- The line Homer says to Marge when trying to convince her to fly (“I wanna shake off the dust of this one-horse town”) is from the movie It’s a Wonderful Life.
- The part where Abe screams on the plane refers to the movie Home Alone.
- The movies Homer rent involve plane crashes.
- Marge’s dream refers to the TV series Lost in Space.
- The scene with Marge and her mum on a cornfield is from the movie: North by Northwest.
- Lowenstein is the psychiatrist from the movie The Prince of Tides.
- The last scene with Homer and Marge on the plain is like a scene in the movie “Say anything…”
- The Mount Lushmore caricature of Homer refers to the mascot for the the magazine: The New Yorker.
- The part where Marge tears up a paper on a plane is from Stephen King’s The Langoliers
- Marge’s childhood trauma is when she sees her father as a steward on a plane. This refers to the novel Marnie.
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Sources:
Wikipedia

- Zlash


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