Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Language for Literature / Dispatch #4

Read the following extract that might help you make a smooth transition from narrative to drama. Decide why you would or wouldn't call it dramatic but not drama:

Mr. Carter permitted himself a wintry smile. "His grudge, therefore," he said, "is perfectly understandable."
"It was him or me, Mr. Carter."
"Of course. Is Mrs. Parker still with you?"
"No, sir. We broke up about three months ago. I heard he killed her yesterday."
"Killed her? Do you suppose he found out first where to find you?"
"She didn't know, Mr. Carter."
"You're sure of that?"
"Yes, sir."

Questions:
1. What are the implied meanings of 'wintry smile' and 'grudge' in the first sentence? What do they say about Mr. Carter’s personality?

2. What syntactical variations of the interrogative sentence do you notice in the extract? Discuss their implications.

3. By ‘Of course’ Mr. Carter implies that he is talking to the killer. True, false or difficult to tell. Give reason for your answer.

4. What was the relationship between the woman and the person being interrogated?

5. Who does Mr. Carter refer to as ‘he’ in line 5?

6. Why do you think the man has come to Mr. Carter?

7. Can you tell the name of the person Mr. Carter is talking to?

8. In line 5 we get “find” in two senses. What are they? How are the two senses constructed?

9. List all the expressions in the extract that help develop suspense and tension in the extract.

10. What is the syntactical peculiarity of the interrogative sentence in line 5? Why is this pattern of sentence particularly effective in conveying shock, surprise and other emotional outbursts?

11. Which other interrogative is mixed with surprise?

12. The speaker sounds confident in the last line. How can the syntax of the line firmly express his self-confidence?

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Tutorial Assignments (Session 2006-2007)

Tutorial Assignments
1 Read the following poem and answer the questions below the text:

Gerard Manley Hopkins
Duns Scotus’s Oxford

Towery city and branchy between towers;
Cuckoo-echoing, bell-swarmèd, lark-charmèd, rook-racked, river-rounded;
The dapple-eared lily below thee; that country and town did
Once encounter in, here coped and poised powers;

Thou hast a base and brackish skirt there, sours
That neighbour-nature thy grey beauty is grounded
Best in; graceless growth, thou hast confounded
Rural rural keeping ─ folk, flocks, and flowers.

Yet ah! this air I gather and I release
He lived on; these weeds and waters, these walls are what
He haunted who of all men most sways my spirits to peace;

Of reality the rarest-veinèd unraveller; a not
Rivalled insight, be rival Italy or Greece;
Who fired France for Mary without spot.


Questions:

1. What are the appropriate meanings of the following: towery, branchy, bell-swarmèd, rook-racked, coped, brackish, confounded, reality, spot?
2. What is peculiar about the morphological character of its diction ? Which of your senses is engaged most? Why?
3. What is the syntactic explanation of once encounter in (l.4), sours/ That neighbour-nature (ll.5-6), thou hast confounded/ Rural rural keeping (ll.7-8), be rival Italy or Greece (l.13), who fired France (l.14)?
4. Who is he in line 10?
5. Which elements in the poem require you to go outside the text for interpretation? Why?
6. What is unusual about the literary form employed in the poem? How do the vocabulary and syntax support its formal departures?

________


2. Write a critical appreciation of the above poem using the techniques of practical criticism. (First show the anatomical findings in the margin of the text and then write an essay.

3. Why could one call Bradford’s Of Plymouth Plantation history rather than literature? Give adequate justification for your position.

4. Discuss the Latinate syntax of Milton’s English in the Books of Paradise Lost you have read.



Submit all your assignments to the office of the Department. Deadline for submission: September 20, 2008. No submission is acceptable after that date.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Eng-301 : Language for Literature

Despatch # 3

React to the following texts with
TRUE, FALSE or CAN'T TELL and justify your answer.

A. Mary had a little lamb. Its fleece was white as snow,

And everywhere that Mary went the lamb was sure to go.

It followed her to school one day; that was against the rule.

It made the children laugh and play to see a lamb at school.


1. Mary's lamb had white fleece.



2. Mary went to school regularly.



3. The lamb followed Mary everywhere she went.



4. The lamb had a ribbon around its neck.



5. Mary was a boy.


6. Mary was a woman.




7. Maybe Mary liked to go to school.



8. Maybe Mary didn't have a lamb.



In judging a "maybe" statement, do the following: (1) read the statement without the "maybe"; (2) judge the statement without the "maybe." If the statement without the "maybe" is "can't tell" or if it is true, then the "maybe" statement is true. If the statement without the "maybe" is false, then the "maybe" statement is false.


B. Little Red Riding Hood's grandmother was ill, and Red decided to take her a basket of goodies to help her get well. The big bad wolf saw Red walking through the woods on her way to the grandmother's house, and he ran ahead to the grand­mother's house and ate the grandmother. Although Red didn't recognize the wolf when she arrived at her grandmother's house, she screamed in time to be rescued by a nearby woodsman.

1. Red's grandmother is alive when the story starts.

2. Red's mother fixed the basket of goodies for Red to take.

3. Red recognized the wolf in time to be rescued.

.

4. Red was taking the goodies to her grandmother's house when the wolf saw her in the woods.

5. The wolf was bad.


6. Maybe Red saw the wolf in the woods at the same time the wolf saw her.


7. Red didn't like her grandmother.

8. Red ran all the way from her house to her grandmother's house.




9. Maybe Red had her bicycle with her.



10. Maybe Red's grandmother wasn't really ill but was testing Red to see what Red would do.



11. Red noticed immediately that the wolf was not the grandmother.



12. Red couldn't have been in a big hurry to get to her grandmother's house, or she would have been running, not walking, through the woods.



13. Red was rescued by a passing woodsman.



C. An aged man is but a paltry thing,

A tattered coat upon a stick, unless

Soul clap its hands and sing, and louder sing

For every tatter in its mortal dress ....


1. How many meanings of ‘paltry’ do you know? Which of them fits into this context? Justify your answer.


2. The word ‘thing’(l.1) refers to an object. Which object does it refer to?

Give reasons for your choice.


3. The word ‘but’ is important because it enhances what the speaker suggests about aged man.

a) True b) False c) Can’t tell.

Justify your answer.


4. How are ‘paltry’ (l.1), and ‘tatter’ (l.4) related? ‘Tatter’ is used in two parts of speech’. What are they and how do they enhance the idea of age in the poem?


5. What structural difference do you notice between the first line and ‘…unless/ Soul clap … louder sing’? Do you notice any grammatical difference in the use of verbs in those two sentences? How do they affect the senses?


6. What is ‘mortal dress’? (l.4) What relationship is established between ‘tattered coat’ and ‘mortal dress’? How are they similar or dissimilar? If tears are implied by tatter/tattered, in what sense is the mortal dress torn?


7. Establish a relationship between ‘tattered coat’, ‘stick’ and old age.


8. Is the voice personal or impersonal? Is there respect or disrespect, or pity for old age in the poem? Which words suggest the speaker’s attitude to old age and how?




D. Blessed be God that I have wedded five,

Of whiche I have piked out the beste,

Bothe of hir nether purs and of hir cheste.

Diverse scoles maken parfit clerkes,

And diverse practikes in sondry werkes

Maken the werkman parfit sikerly:

Of five housbondes scoleying am I.

Welcome the sixte whan that evere he shal!


1. Note all the differences that you notice between modern English and the English of the text. What peculiarities do you find about spelling?

2. How do they affect your reading?

3. Find out all the modern substitutes for the words in the text.

4. Which word(s) have long since lost the meaning used in the text?

5. What is the dominant grammatical pattern in the poem? Explain the effect of the shift of grammatical pattern from perfect to indefinite in the poem.

6. How is the speaker's joyous and triumphant mood created in the poem?

7. What is a bawdy word? Do you find any bawdy expression in the poem?

8. Summarize the speaker's argument.

______


Saturday, August 9, 2008

Talking Point: Mephistopheles is a foreshadowing of the latter Dr. Faustus. (Discuss.)

I saw there a question about Dr.Faustus, my flame.I've still got a lot to talk about it. But how can I post my ideas on the notice board? Anyway I think there's a glimmer of human sympathy for Faustus in Mephisto discernible right at the start that persists throughout the play. (Did you listen to the play on the cassette? If not, you should). While talking to Faustus he has the painful memory of his own downfall for pride and arrogance at the ack of his mind. We can imagine an excited, effusive, vociferous Mephisto before his fall while joining the renegade team and perhaps delivering speeches like Faustus now. These two characters counterpoint each other: excitement and calm, perversity and circumspection, joy and sorrow are played off against each other in their encounters and engagements. Compare the lines where Mephisto's nostalgia about the face of his creator and Faustus's tearful, prayerful supplication for the mercy of God in the end of the play. Now you should be able to see the latter Faustus in the cool and sad Mephisto when the fallen divine teaches the devil manliness and fortitude.

I hope you get my point. You could elaborate on it with critical illustrations from the text.