Frank Van itibaren Shishmanovo, Bulgaria

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05/04/2024

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Frank Van Kitabın yeniden yazılması (10)

2019-10-18 05:41

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It was such an amazing novel. The way that Charlotte Bronte delivered the story was just stunning. It was filled with passion, and it made me think if Charlotte Bronte is as passionate a person as Jane Eyre. I loved Jane's character. She's such a strong, independent woman, and I truly prefer heroines with strong personalities. She's docile, but at the same time passionate; obedient, but at the same time defiant. I like how the story starts when Jane was just a girl, full of ardor, especially when angry. When she went to Lowood, I liked Helen Burns, too, because she is wise. It's just a shame that she ended up that way. And then, the part I awaited: when Jane met Mr. Rochester. He, too, is very passionate. I love how their relationship slowly bloomed, and how the reader didn't know at first that Mr. Rochester loves Jane as much as she loves him. I also love how Mr. Rochester's secret was unraveled, and how Jane escaped from Thornfield. And I still love how Jane met St. John Rivers. He was quite annoying when he kept urging Jane, because even though St. John is handsome and kind, I'm still Team Edward Rochester. I truly didn't expect the ending. It was sad--the reunion of Mr. Rochester and Jane. I feel sympathy with Mr. Rochester's condition, and I pitied him very much when he confessed how he grieved Jane's going away. Even though it was a little sad, the ending was still satisfactory, because I felt Jane's content and happiness. This is the best classic I've ever read.

2019-10-18 07:41

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I’m a big fan of Hill. But Hill is not an easy poet. He supplies no end notes, so often the reader is left with the language itself. Without some knowledge of history and the Bible, much will be missed. Despite that, I feel Hill’s language, at its best, does possess what Michael Dirda of the Washington Post called a “sensuality and coiled force,” which in a way reminds me of Donne, and the idea of the “strong line.” Nevertheless, Hill is a poet of the 20th Century. The images and history he draws on are our own. He is a Christian poet, but one who is practically Manichean in his use of light and dark in history. For Hill “innocence is no earthly weapon.” In Canaan, Hill has reinvented himself, choosing image over rhyme. His earlier work, which also possessed strong images, was more formal, and somewhat recalled Allan Tate (a poet Hill greatly admires). The book has a number of stunning sequences. My favorite is “De Jure Belli Ac Pacis,” which is dedicated to Hans Bernd von Haefton, one of the bomb plot conspirators against Hitler. Martyrdom is important to Hill, and he shows it’s cost, absent the hagiography: "The iron-beamed engine shed has chapel windows. Glare-eyed you spun. The hooks are still in the beam; a sun patch drains to nothing; here the chocked blood seeped into place, here the abused blood set its own wreaths." The whole sequence runs on like this, taut and powerful. I saw Hill read this years ago, and he said this poem caused some problems with a friend, a Dominican priest, in particular the line “Evil is not good’s absence but gravity’s everlasting bedrock and its fatal chains inert, violent, the suffrage of our days.” Hill acknowledged the grimness of these lines, and the possibility of a theological line being crossed, but he also felt this a legitimate (and human) response for poet and non-poet alike. What we think and muse over is not the same thing as belief. He then appealed for a theologian in the house (Catholic University and Georgetown are nearby). (Hill is funny in person, and mocks his own gravity at times. He is also generous in explaining poems and answering questions.) Another remarkable sequence is “Scenes with Harlequins,” which is written in memory of Aleksandr Blok. Blok is an important figure is Russian literature, and is viewed by many Russians as something of a prophet. Hill touches on Blok’s prophetic nature with these vivid lines that show the deep religiousness of the Russian soul, but also the sense of an approaching storm -- the Revolution. “The risen Christ! Once more faith is upon us, a jubilant brief keening with respite: Obedience, bitter joy, the elements, clouds, winds, louvres where the bell makes its wild mouths: Holy Rus – into the rain’s horizons, peacock-dyed tail feathers of storm, so it goes on.” The collection also has some sequences that are about England in particular, and the poet’s sense that what was once noble and heroic is now gone and that the country is “voiding substance like quicklime”. You will also find pieces dealing with government “Mysticism and Democracy” and the Church of England. All are couched in terms of a country in downward spiral, which I find very reminiscent of the Book of Kings. There is an extended sequence dealing with Churchill’s funeral, where the old veterans are poignantly portrayed as warriors from another time: “The men hefting their accouterments of webbed tin, many in bandages, with cigarettes, with scuffed hands aflare, as though exhaustion drew them to life;” The rest of the collection also has a number of dedicatory poems to such figures as William Arrowsmith, William Cobbitt, Aileen Ireland, and others. I don’t really know who these people are, but it doesn’t seem to matter, much in a way that those elegies of Donne continue to move us, even though the people they were written for seem distant. It’s best, I think, to view such poems as vehicles for the poet’s speculation on larger matters. Not knowing the subject certainly didn’t affect my enjoyment of the dedicatory poems, and Hill’s austere and muscular language.

Okuyucu Frank Van itibaren Shishmanovo, Bulgaria

Kullanıcı, bu kitapları portalın yayın kurulu olan 2017-2018'de en ilginç olarak değerlendirdi "TrendKitaplar Kütüphanesi" Tüm okuyucuların bu literatürü tanımalarını tavsiye eder.