Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Poems

Poem that I love;
Robert Frost's "Fire and Ice"
Some people say the world will end in fire
Some say in Ice
From what I've tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire
But If It had to perish twice, 
I think I know enough of hate 
to say that for destruction of ice
Is also great
and would suffice.
Personally it is one of my all time favorite poems ( ironically not listed on either website we were given to use, so screw that I'm still using it ), I've adored it since I was younger, I love poems that rhyme, and simply sound pleasing to the ear and this poem definitely does it for me. I also love the meaning that one can find within the poem I don't believe poems have one set in stone meaning; that's like saying a painting is only meant to mean one thing to everyone. That's not true at all. I think that poems as well as any form of art, hold different meaning for different people, you can't just say it means one thing, to everyone. You can't really tell me "Oh this poem, it only means one thing, one way, ever, at all" I mean, you could say that to me, but I sure as Hell wouldn't listen. So I can personally find a good few different meaning to the poem myself. I don't think it necessarily is referencing the and of the world but the end of the world I find for me in this poem is an allusion to love. At least, that's the impression I've always gotten from it. Sort of explaining how first it can be of warmth desire, heat and fire, but when it ends it tends to be cold. I'm not very good at explaining what it means to me, but I really do love this poem. I'm very fond of it.

As for the poem I hate?
I couldn't find one.
I love poetry in general, and I genuinely couldn't find one I had a severe problem with. Even if I didn't necessarily adore the poem, I didn't hate it. It's hard for me to find things art related that I really really dislike. I'm a terrible disappointment that way. I mean the whole idea of finding a poem I hate, or violently digging for meaning reminds me of a poem;
"...But all they want to do
is tie the poem to a chair with rope
and torture a confession out of it.



They begin beating it with a hose
to find out what it really means."
-Billy Collins
I mean I love poetry, I even love things that poets just say 
"To pay attention, this is our endless and proper work" 
-Mary Oliver
I mean that's not even a poem, that's just a quote from a poet and I really adore it. Guh, it's hard for me to find things that I really hate. That's all I suppose. 
So I think I'll just put up more poems that I love. Because I love them all.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Macbeth V

Durring Act Four we actually got to see some perspective on Macbeth from other characters which I very much enjoyed. I really liked getting to see Macduff, and he was probably one of my favorite characters for a lot of reasons. The fact that he's not just a cold man, and that he does actually value human life.  For example his quote to Malcolm after Malcolm suggested killing Macbeth for revenge, like a man "I shall do so/But I must also feel it as a man/I cannot but remember such things were/That were most precious to me. Did heaven look on," Showing that he did grieve for his family, and that violence shouldn't always be a man's first reaction to something negative. Overall I did really like getting some new perspective on Macbeth's actions. Perspective was something that I really did enjoy in act four. And the perspective on many of the characters


Also a song about perspective for you! 

Macbeth VI

at the end of the play we got to see some perspective on Macbeth from other characters which I very much enjoyed. I found this song awhile ago, ( Structure by Innerpartysystem ) and it was a candidate for being animated into the Macbeth movie that I made, but I ended up going against it. Still I thought it may be interesting to explain it a bit, because I viewed it as a song about perspective. More specifically Macduff, Banquo and Lady Macbeth's perspectives on Macbeth through the duration of the play. 
"Why did you change?
Why did you bend and break?
When the water turned to wine, did it feel the same?'

Fairly simply this is the chorus. It would mainly be about Macduff questioning Macbeth's very drastic change from the beginning of the story; Being seen as a powerful, brave and noble man of war, into a murderous monster, along with someone who's almost cowardice ( how he couldn't kill Macduff's family himself ). It could also be a spin of Macbeth's rise to power "When the water turned to wine, Did it feel the same". I see that in a way that it could be referenced from him going from something pure, clean and transparent, to turning into blood/wine something impure. The line could be interpreted also explaining how he went from water of a poorer less powerful man to wine which signifies in this light wealth/ his change over to king.
You suck the bottle dry
Touch fingers to the night
Feels like I've been here before
Now there's an empty hole where you were long ago
But things are different when you're young
This Verse would've been from the perspective from first Lady Macbeth ( that was my first idea at least). Explaining her love for Macbeth, and that now he's become a different unloving and cold man, and that when he was young their relationship was much better. Explaining how she thought that making him king would also make him a better man, when in fact it did the opposite. I also thought I could use this to work with Banquo but I decided if I were to use this song, the next verse was more fitting. The nights are getting cold
Those faces growing old
And there is nothing you can do
So sing your sad excuses
You've got the scars to prove it
And I'm sure they'll sing along"
This verse was the one that I found more fitting to Banquo than to the other characters. Explaining that there isn't anything that macbeth can do to escape his face and his punishment for his deeds as Macduff's army grows nearer to him. and to "Sing his sad excuses" Excuses for the reason Banquo, Duncan and Macduff's family were all slaughtered, or his excuses for Macbeth's reasoning not to be afraid of Macduff such as the witches prophecies. 
So that's how things would've gone if I had indeed chosen to use this song as opposed to the other one. It was a close decision. 

Blog Post IV

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Blog Act III

Unfortunately I don't have much to say on the matter of act three. Due to not only being out sick, but bomb threats, power outages, construction accidents, and snow days this act was very hazy for me, as I had to try and read it on my own. This of course, was a hugely maddening experience. I so I think instead of writing a very vague few paragraphs about what happened in act three, I'll write about my frustration and annoyance about trying to understand act three.
Shakespearian is very difficult to read, anyone who's looked at it will agree. It's a very odd style of writing, complex and not always poetic, using strange phrases that are combinations of words like 'twas, 'twill, thou, and others. Interestingly enough, that's not even close to how people normally talked at the time. It's as if it were an entire language on it's own. In a way I can draw a parallel from Shakespearian to text, or Leetspeak. No one really T41k5 1iK3 Thi5, & whn w/ tlk w/ dnt actlly leave out every other vowel when we talk. You can und3r5t4nd wh4t 1'm typ1ng, 8ut 1t'5 n0t h0w w3 t4lk. But if you've never seen leetpeak ( 4|\|D 7RU57 /\/\3, 1 \/\/45 U51|\|9 4 /\/\U(|-| /\/\0R3 r34D1|\|9 PhR13|\|DL'/ \/4R14710|\|  ), or text talk, it's very difficult to understand. For me, Shakespearian is almost a totally different language, and very, very hard to read. 

Friday, January 13, 2012

Act II Part I

Betrayal and Chess Pieces 
One of the themes that runs heavily through Act II is the theme of Betrayal, in which Macbeth kills King Duncan. Macbeth thinks that he's doing it for all the right reasons, because he would make a better King than Duncan, that Duncan is a very poor leader despite his kindess. Macbeth isn't alone in his thinking, Duncan was kind but a poor leader. Unfortunately he's being manipulated as though he were a lowly pawn. In reality Macbeth is very easily manipulated by women, be it the three witches who serve as prophets or Lady Macbeth. Macbeth seems not only hapless but blind to this. It reminds me strongly of a game of chess. Despite the fact that the king must be captured to win the game, he is very useless on his own. Circling endlessly. Whilst the king seems to be the most valued, really in this game one of the most powerful and quick moving players is the Queen. The similarity between how weak and nearly useless the king is, while the Queen moves endlessly more and manipulates the bored to protect her own king, while attempting to destroy the other. In such a way Chess is extremely similar to Macbeth and his Lady's relationship. But their game of Chess isn't all that simple. Other pawns stand in their way, such as Malcolm and MacDuff, and intimidating foes such as the three witches and Banquo. Their Game of Chess will never be simple, and the further into it they go, the more the black and white of what is right and wrong fades and becomes exponentially more confusing.