To live a barren sister all your life, Chanting faint hymns to the cold fruitless moon. —Theseus' warning to Hermia of what could become of her if she doesn't agree to marry the man her father has chosen for her. (A "barren sister" is a nun.) But earthlier happy is the rose distilled Than that which withering on the virgin thorn Grows, lives, and dies in single blessedness. —Theseus' reminder to Hermia that here on earth married women are happier than unmarried ones.
I call myself a veteran, for instance let me deamonstrate How evil faith can be replaced by super stars we see in space When my genius wakes – tell it you think that what you see is fake ‘cause I embellish need with hate, while rappers sell the “cream and cake” I fiend to make a feeble state of mind this blind to trees and lakes Look deep between the steaming slate n realize what she sees, she takes She needs a break, and beat that quakes to ever really be this great But dreams are waste, once upon a time I still believed in fate but I know the games the same, and I know she's testin' me. I'm not seein' every play - while she's expectin' me to referee. It's embedded in my destiny to live a life of stress, succeed. Then when I go to rest in peace I can finally
Love through the Ages Chart Main Themes: - Romance and passion - Love and marriage - Illicit love - Meetings and partings - Parents and family Text | Year | Aspects | Quote | Analysis | Prose | The Great GatsbyFitzgerald | 1923Mod. | MarriageAdulteryFamily | “Neither of them can stand the person they’re married to.”“That’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool.” | First person.Signifies the breakdown of traditional morals in the 20th Century, valued nothing but money. Marriage was no longer valued. | The WoodlandersThomas Hardy | 1887Vic. | LossLoveAnger | “As if she were stroking a little bird” | Simile.Class differences (Giles and Doc)Melodramatic, Giles dies after sleeping in rain.Poetic, rhythmic.Eyes are a metonym for beauty.
Bottom, for the sake of the trick, was unfortunately transformed into a human with an ass’ head. The love-juice had the effect of blinding Titania’s judgment and also the effect of making her think that everything about the first creature she sees, in this case, Bottom, is beautiful and perfect. When Bottom wakes Titania with his singing, he is showered with undeserving praises from Titania as she renders him an angel who “wakes me from my flow’ry bed”. Even as she sees him, she implores him to sing again as “mine ear is much enamoured of thy note”. She ends off her initial praises with a conclusive note, that “on the first view, to say, to swear, I love thee”.
"My only love sprung from my only hate! Too early seen unknown, and known too late!" "O, she doth teach the torches to burn bright! It seems she hangs upon the cheek of night as a rich jewel in Ethiop's ear; Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear!" Why then, O brawling love!
Othello Imagery Journal Animal Imagery 1. a) Iago: And though he in a fertile climate dwell / Plague him with flies: though that his joy be joy, /Yet throw such chances of vexation on’t / As may lose some colour. (1.1. 71-74) b) Do your best in creating rage and commotion within Desdemona’s family, and destroy all tranquility there might be in Brabantio’s life. Iago is ordering Roderigo to go and make a commotion in front of Brabantio’s house, telling Brabantio that he’s been “robbed” his daughter by Othello, using the most primitive, vulgar description in order to make Brabantio angry and take action against Othello. c) Poison, incense, plague, lose some colour.
The simple fact is, she’s too tired to move. O where’s the demon lover, the wild boy who kissed the future to her flesh beneath what skies, what stars, what space! and swore to love her through hell’s own fires? A child stretches above her and, laughing, crowns her with a tinsel wreath. She gathers up a new, dismembered toy.
In the play, Henry Higgins is a well-educated phoneticist who takes an ordinary flower girl and turns her into a perfect woman by teaching her manners and language. Higgins falls in love with his creation Eliza Doolittle, the flower girl, into a high class woman. In the end, Eliza refuses to marry Higgins. The allusion to Metamorphoses in the play Pygmalion, predominates and enhances the play in its entirety. It is obvious that there are many difference between the play and the myth, however it is in the similarities that the allusion is found.
At the very moment they hear the beautiful, seductive singing the Sirens have weaved their spell upon them. You can tell from the lyrics of the song, Go to sleep little baby; You, Me, and the devil makes three, that the sirens are devious and dangerously seductive, and they’re chugging the gang alcohol, which is slowing makes them fall asleep and turns Pete into a toad. That’s ironic to Circe from “The Odyssey” but instead of getting drugged, Pete was drunk, and not turning into a pig but a toad. The Sirens scene is obvious ironic to Homer’s “The Odyssey” because Odysseus had his men put beeswax in their so they wouldn’t hear the singing. So I think Ulysses and the gang falling under the Siren’s spell helps visualize the outcome if Odysseus hadn’t thought of that smart tactic.
What light through yonder window breaks?/ It is the East, and Juliet is the sun!/ Arise, fair sun, and kill the envious moon,/ Who is already sick and pale with grief/ That thou her maid are far more fair than she.” Act 2, Scene 3, Lines 2-5 * “Her mother is lady of the house/And a good lady, and a wise and virtuous./I nursed her daughter that you talked withal” – Act 1, Scene 5, Lines 126-128 * “My only love has sprung from my only hate!/Too early seen unknown, and known too late!/ Prodigious birth of love it is to me/That I must love a loathed enemy” Act 1, scene 5, Lines 152- 155 * “’Tis but thy name that is my enemy./Thou art thyself, though not a Montague./What’s a Montague? It is nor hand, nor foot,/nor arm, nor face” Act 2, scene 2, Lines 41-44 * “Call me but love, and I’ll be new baptized./Henceforth I never shall be Romeo.” Act 2, Scene 2, Lines 54-55 * “Love is a smoke made with the fume of sighs;/Being purged, a fire sparkling in lovers’ eyes;/Being vexed, a sea nourished with loving tears.” Act 1, Scene 1, Lines 197-199 * “ “Yea,” quoth my husband. “Fall’st upon thy face?/Thou wilt fall