Thursday, April 25, 2013
Groupthink
Well I'm not necessarily in a complete group. It's more like I'm doing 3 poems and one other person is doing one with me while another person is doing 2 with me. So I'm doing one by myself. One person did their gridlock for one of them so we discussed a lot on the connotation of The Tide Rises the Tide falls because we were all a little confused over that one.
Gridlock- A Dream Within a Dream by Edgar Allan Poe
Title
(of poem
means)
|
If what we think is real is a dream and what is a dream is actually real. |
Paraphrase
(parts of the
poem)
|
"And I hold within my hand Grains of the golden sand- How few! yet how they creep Through my fingers to the deep, While I weep- while I weep! O God! can I not grasp Them with a tighter clasp? O God! can I not save One from the pitiless wave?" He is describing how few grains of sand there are in his hand yet it seems like there is an endless amount of them and he cannot hold every single one. |
Connotation
(of some of the words –
changing literal meaning to implied or associated values)
|
"O God! can I not save one from the pitiless wave?" He means not literally "save" the grains of sand from a wave. He means can he hold every single grain of sand before the water washes it away. |
Attitude
(What is the attitude of the
author, characters or yourself?)
|
The attitude is pondering and questioning. |
Shift
(At first we think or feel one
way – then there is a shift: identify the shifts and explain
them)
|
The big shift is between the two stanzas. The first is describing the sweetness of being in a dream within a dream while the second is describing the horror and frustration the author seems to have trying to tell what is real or not. |
Title Revisited
(Any new insights on meaning or
significance of title?)
|
It's hard to tell a dream from reality. |
Theme
|
No matter how hard we try to hold on to something or someone we love, they eventually start slipping through our fingers. |
Gridlock- The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost
Titleof poem means
|
Literally means....a road not taken before. Probably a road that has leaves and
branches all on it, no foot prints or anything
|
Paraphraseparts of the Poem
|
"And sorry I could not travel both, And be one traveler, long I stood" Means
that the traveler wishes he could take both paths but he is only one person so
he has to choose which one he wants to take.
|
Connotationof some of the words – changing literal meaning to implied
or associated values
|
|
AttitudeWhat is the attitude of the author, characters or
yourself?
|
The character, the traveler, seems confused as well as adventurous. I also felt
confused at first but then optomistic.
The whole decision making issue is confusing to people. It's hard to make decisions. |
ShiftAt first we think or feel one way – then there is a shift:
identify the shifts and explain them
|
"And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black. Oh, I marked the first for another day! Yet knowing how way leads on to way I doubted if I should ever come back. I shall be telling this with a sigh Somewhere ages and ages hence: Two roads diverged in a wood, and I, I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference." There's the shift...in the beginning the traveler describes how the one of the paths looks "safe" and how one looks "less traveled" making it seem like he would obviously take the "safe" one. BUT! He decides to take it another day and follow the one "less traveled". He took a risk and it "made all the difference." |
Title
revisitedAny new insights on meaning
or significance of title?
|
The title basically describes taking risks. Taking a road for instance that you
have never traveled. Be adventurous!
|
Theme Sometimes it's nice to make risky decisions and be adventurous. You never know
where they might lead.
|
Gridlock- The Tide Rises the Tide Falls by Longfellow
Titleof poem means
|
The tide comes then the tide goes away again
|
Paraphraseparts of the Poem
|
As the tide is rising and falling, the sun is going down and the beach-goer
leaves the beach. It's night time and it's dark. The sea wipes away the
footprints from the day. The sun comes back up and everything awakens but the
traveller doesn't return to the beach. All the while, the tide is rising and
falling.
|
Connotationof some of the words – changing literal meaning to implied
or associated values
|
The ocean is a metaphor for the sun
rising and setting and time going on. Te repitition of the title proves that.
The waves are setting everything back to new, signifying a new day
|
AttitudeWhat is the attitude of the author, characters or
yourself?
|
The author is
melancholy. He is admiring of the sea's ability to be unknowing of time or
events.
|
ShiftAt first we think or feel one way – then there is a shift:
identify the shifts and explain them
|
The shift is after the second stanza and before the third. We go from nighttime
and peaceful to daylight and awakenings.
|
Title
revisitedAny new insights on meaning
or significance of title?
|
The title signifies the continuity of the tide rising and the tide falling.
|
ThemeLife goes on.
|
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Seventh Reading
I picked the poem The Tide Rises the Tide Falls by Longfellow to repeat seven times. It was interesting because we sang this in choir about two years ago so I already knew the poem. I did have to look a few times at the words because I had forgotten some, but eventually I got the rise and fall of the poem. After about the fourth time I felt like I got it down. Before I did this excerise I went into it already knowing and loving this poem. It made this a whole lot easier to repeat over and over again. And I'm still not sick of it! After every single time I thought about the poem as a whole as well as individual lines. I, as the blog said, meditated on it. The poem is so soothing to the ears that I loved repeating it seven times.
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Lit. Circles Multiple Choice Answers
Slaughterhouse 5:
1.D 21.A 41.A
2.C 22.B 42.D
3.D 23.C 43.A
4.A 24. B 44.B
5.B 25.C 45.D
6.C 26.D 46.C
7.A 27.D 47.C
8.D 28.B 48. B
9.D 29.D 49.A
10.C 30.A 50.A
11.D 31.A
12.A 32.B
13.A 33.C
14.B 34.C
15.D 35.D
16.A 36.A
17.A 37.B
18.C 38.D
19.D 39.C
20.C 40.D
Life of Pi
1.C
2.A
3.C
4.E
5.C
6.B
1.D 21.A 41.A
2.C 22.B 42.D
3.D 23.C 43.A
4.A 24. B 44.B
5.B 25.C 45.D
6.C 26.D 46.C
7.A 27.D 47.C
8.D 28.B 48. B
9.D 29.D 49.A
10.C 30.A 50.A
11.D 31.A
12.A 32.B
13.A 33.C
14.B 34.C
15.D 35.D
16.A 36.A
17.A 37.B
18.C 38.D
19.D 39.C
20.C 40.D
Life of Pi
1.C
2.A
3.C
4.E
5.C
6.B
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
1987 AP English Literature Multiple Choice Answers
1. C
2. A
3. C
4. E
5. D
6. D
7.E
8.B
9.E
10.C
11. D
12. B
13.B
14. C
15. A
16.B
17.C
18. E
19. A
20. C
21. E
22. E
23.B
24. A
25.A
26.C
27.E
28.D
29.A
30. B
31.D
32.B
33. D
34. A
35. E
36. E
37. B
38.D
39.C
40.C
41.B
42.A
43.B
44.E
45.A
46.B
47.B
48.A
49.C
50.D
51.C
52. C
53.B
54.A
55.B
56.C
57.D
58.E
59.B
60.A
2. A
3. C
4. E
5. D
6. D
7.E
8.B
9.E
10.C
11. D
12. B
13.B
14. C
15. A
16.B
17.C
18. E
19. A
20. C
21. E
22. E
23.B
24. A
25.A
26.C
27.E
28.D
29.A
30. B
31.D
32.B
33. D
34. A
35. E
36. E
37. B
38.D
39.C
40.C
41.B
42.A
43.B
44.E
45.A
46.B
47.B
48.A
49.C
50.D
51.C
52. C
53.B
54.A
55.B
56.C
57.D
58.E
59.B
60.A
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