Friday, January 24, 2020

Comparing Solomon and Gaeynor to Shakespeares Romeo and Juliet Essay

Solomon and Gaeynor is little more than another,   more modern version of Romeo and Julliet.   The basic story line in Solomon and Gaeynor is about a couple who fall deeply in love,   but face the problem that their families are very different,   and would never agree to a marriage between the two of them.   Similarly in Romeo and Julliet,   a young couple fall hopelessly in love,   but due to the dispute amongst the two families,   it is not possible for them to marry,   and live happily ever after.   Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚   Solomon,   a young Jewish man meets a welsh girl,   whilst he is going from door to door in order to sell cloth for making clothes.   They fall in love within a short period of time,   however Gaeynor is not aware that Solomon comes from a Jewish background.   Likewise his family do not know of his Welsh lover.   After he meets Gaeynors family and is halfway accepted by the them,   Gaeynor becomes rather suspicous that he is keeping their relationship so secret,   and that he has never presented her to his family. In Romeo and Julliet a similar barrier stands between the two lovers,   however in this case both the lovers were aquainted with the fact.   The main difference however is that in Romeo and Julliet the lovers are being held apart by a war,   which divides the two families.   In comparison,   Solomon and Gaeynor are being kept apart by the fact that they derive from different religious backgrounds.   Gaeynor is of Jewish origin,   and as has often been so in the course of history,   the Jewish people have been hated by the local population,   and were blamed for local... ...meo and Julliet there was no baby that added to the confusion of the situation.   However in Solomon and Gaeynor,   the latter becomes pregnant,   and as a result creates a greater bond between the two lovers,   aswell as adding to the complication of the situation. All in all though,   both of these couples suffered a very similar fate,   and had their love and feelings for each other surpressed by the society,   and especially the family.   Certain subtle differences do appear in the two stories,   as well as a difference in the location and time,   but when one looks at the basic structure of both stories,   we arrive at the same result.   Two young people fall in hopelessly in love,   and everything ends in a disaster,   as one of them (or both) die fighting for something that their family hated them for.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Hunter’s in The Snow Essay

The story Hunter’s in the Snow is a fiction published in the year 1982. The author Tobias Wolff tells the story of three men Tub, Frank and Kenny who decide to go on a trip to the woods for hunting. As I read on I find that as the story develops the character unveils. The presentation of the characters does not reveal much and I come to know about the characters only through their actions and I keep guessing about their real self. The three characters who appear to be good friends at the surface have hidden secrets which they conceal from each other and these truths later on lead to their destruction. As the story develops I am surprised to know that they have bitterness for each other which are emphasized in the apt setting of the cold, drab winter time. Their arrogant conversations expose the inhuman complexities of the human nature which is as freezing and unemotional as the winter snow. There are a lot of autobiographical elements in the story and Wolff‘s life is seen within the characters. The opening seems fascinating to me, Tub had been waiting for an hour in the falling snow (Wolff 1) and this draws my curious mind into the story and I am eager to know what follows. The story also makes me reminiscent of my days of hunting with my father during the winter. The dialogues between the hunters remind me how we used to enjoy Mukherjee 2 talking and making fun. I like everything until Kenny appears to be going crazy. He starts hating certain things and shoots at them. It’s pathetic to read when he tells Tub; I hate you (Wolff 78) and before Kenny could pull the trigger Tub shoots Kenny right in the stomach and knocks him over backwards. But the most scheming part to me seems the way in which Frank and Tub behave after the incident. They stop at a coffee shop; forget that they have lost their notes and map and that they are driving in an opposite direction to the hospital. It is strange that with the conservations between the two friends I also become oblivious of the fact that Kenny is bleeding in the car. The efficacy of writing by the writer in relating the conversations between Frank and Tub is so heartfelt and the things revealed so shocking and horrendous that I almost forget the dying Kenny and when at the end I come to know he’s dead it does not surprise me much. The weakness of the story is the narration which is very distant and the speaker just states fact. It’s the setting and dialogues that give insight into the characters. The story is no doubt interesting but inhuman. I read the story Bullett in the Brain and this one attracted me too . The author presents his characters normal and sensible this moment and mad people the next moment. But the story instead of giving me answers to different life situations feels my mind with a lot of questions. It may appear normal that the men who are instinctively primeval are befitting with the primordial settings of the woods but I really cannot come to terms that how Frank and Tub stay so cool and talk on divorce, lust and such things while stuffing themselves with coffee and pancakes while Kenny bleeds to death. I really feel hatred towards them. May be to get rid of persecution they had to let him die. Therefore the story really does not end but it continues to develop in the hearts of readers like me who are eager to find the answers.

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

The War I Was A Devastating Time For The End Of A Day

World War I was a devastating time for the whole entire world, both economically and physically. Even more devastating than the physical destruction and economic losses, were the psychological effects on the soldiers who fought this gruesome war. The conditions and nature of the warfare greatly affected these men. Not only did they suffer from many physical losses, such as death of beloved ones, separation from families, and bodily injuries, they also suffered psychologically due to the extensive trauma. The â€Å"lost generation† suffered immensely from post-traumatic stress, and lost their ability to live normal lives, along with their willpower and strength. They may have survived, but they were living corpses. The war had turned them into†¦show more content†¦In the second stanza, the soldier recalls the old days, when the town â€Å"used to swing so gay† (Owen, 7). He is yearning for the days when life was ideal. In particular, he yearns for love. This is evident through how he states he will never be able to feel a woman’s slim waist or hands. Now, he says that â€Å"all of them touch him like some queer disease† implying that any women he does come into contact with are probably nurses (Owen, 13). This poem depicts how the â€Å"lost generation† was unable to experience normal life experiences after the war, such as a relationship. The soldier even reflects on why he joined the army in the first place. â€Å"It was after football, when he d drunk a peg / He thought he d better join. He wonders why... / Someone had said he d look a god in kilts† (Owen, 23-25). The importance surrounding the life of a soldier and the glamorous uniform enticed him to join the army, but in reality, being a soldier was nothing like he had expected. Instead of people honoring him, which was the reason he joined the war, people only pitied him. Essentially, this poem is comparing the soldier to an old person who spends his last days in sickness, recalling the good days when he was young and healthy. He cannot even put himself to bed, and like an old person needs assistance for such a task. The soldier is an empty soul, every word he utters is dreary and void of any feeling. The future seems