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Showing posts from April, 2019

Summary of Nissim Ezekiel’s The Night of the Scorpion

About the poet: Nissim Ezekiel (1924-2004) was a Jewish poet of Indian origin. He was a multi talented personality. Apart from being the foundational literary figure in Post Colonial Indian Poetry, he was an actor, playwright, editor and art critic. Some of his mentionable works are A Time to Change, Sixty Poems , The Unfinished Man and others . The Night of the Scorpion was included in The Exact Name published in 1965.  In an unequivocal way, the poem depicts the visions of a harsh reality of an Indian’s life. With an unobtrusive personal tone, the poet simultaneously criticises and comes to terms with the contemporary scene. On the Poem: The poem begins with the poet-persona’s recollection of the harrowing experience of witnessing his mother bellowing in pain due to a scorpion’s sting in a murky, rainy night. On that fateful night, as he recalls, his mother was stung by a scorpion which crawled in to hide itself under the sack of rice. The intermittent rain outside for ten h

George Herbert’s The Pulley:

On the poet: George Herbert (1953-1633) was one of the renowned exponents of the Metaphysical School of Poetry who dealt with religious and spiritual themes in his poems. He was a Welsh poet and priest of the Church of England who had been recognised as “one of the foremost British devotional lyricists”. About the poem: The Pulley is a highly religious Metaphysical poem written by George Herbert. The poem is imbued with various religious connotations and allusions. The concept of a pulley has been used in the poem as a metaphysical conceit .The word ‘pulley’ means a wheel on a shaft that is designed to support movement and change of direction. In the first stanza, the poet –persona states that when God creates Human race, he poured all his blessings on them out of his bounty. He made sure that every possible treasure should be provided to them. During his span of life, they were entitled to enjoy all luxuries and treasures of nature. Initially, they were endowed with strength. Su

Summary of William Wordsworth’s The Reverie of Poor Susan

About the Poet : William Wordsworth (1770-1850) was one of the exponents of romantic poetry who had a considerable role in the development of the Romantic Movement in England. His poems are marked with the pantheistic creed and romantic imagination. His oeuvre consists of reflective poems, lyrics, odes and sonnets . Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey and Ode on Intimations of Immortality are some mentionable work of Wordsworth. Source of the Poem : The Reverie of Poor Susan is a romantic poem written in 1797 at Alfoxden. Later, it was published in the collection of Lyrical Ballads in 1798. About the poem: This is a lyric poem which revolves round the emotional experience of the emigrant girl, Susan. The girl recollects the fond memories of her native land in the countryside after listening to the melodious song of a thrush while passing through the Wood Street on a misty morning. She falls into a deep trance instantly. She envisioned a picture of a serene rustic s

Idea of love in the 16th Century

Love is the highest value which makes us fundamentally human. In Christianity, Love has been considered a unique virtue. Universal love is the essential concept solemnized by almost every religion in the world. Human society has been always highly prescriptive about the idea of love in conjugal relationship. Society has scripted a notion of romantic ecstasy in this regard from the dawn of history. In ancient Greece, they used three loosely synonymous words to define love, ‘Eros’ which means sexual love, ‘Philia’ which means friendship, and ‘Agape’ which means compassion. In Plato’s Symposium (210-212), particularly the speech of Socrates recounts the doctrine about Eros, that he modestly says, has been imparted to them by the wise woman Diotima. She bids us not to linger in the love evoked by the beauty in a single human body, but to mount up as by stair,” from one going on to two and from two   to

Summary of the poem Sympathy, by Paul Laurence Dunbar

About the poet:   Sympathy is a poem written by African- American poet Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872-1906).His parents were enslaved in Kentucky before the Civil War. Dunbar was a prodigious child who started writing stories and verse at the age of six. At the age of 16, he published his first series of poems. The above mentioned poem was published in a collection titled lyrics of the Hearthside in1899.Being a Black American; it is obvious that he experienced the racial discrimination and prejudice rampant in the society. The pain of slave captivity has been expressed poignantly in the poem. Summary of the poem:  In the first stanza, the poet persona affirms that he knows what the captive bird feels being confined in a cage .It is a heart rending experience for the captive bird to see the bright sunbeams radiating through the hilly slopes and to watch the crystal clear river flowing gently. When the first bird sings and the first bud blooms emanating its mild fragrance, the caged bird