Monday, February 29, 2016

Watch For What's Under the Gold

Title: 



Both up and down, but left and right,
Filling your eyelids with things of light.
Shiny, but not made of precious metal.
Bright and sparkly—the burning unsettle.
Lots and lots of yellow gold, lots of red gold.

There is no gold!...
there is NO g o l d!


Friday, February 19, 2016

My Critical Reflection on "Fire and Ice" by Robert Frost

 Robert Frost Chooses Fire




















 






Humans are the kind of creatures that like to ponder over death and specifically, their own deaths.








Robert Frost is no different. 





Indeed, he writes this poem called "Fire and Ice", and like most poetry, it is about death.  The biggest different between what most other people would say and our poet’s words is the fact that he is contemplating the world’s death and not just his own.  

Beginning with the rhyme scheme, Frost uses a basic one that has the effect of producing music, or at the very least, a musical beat.

ABAABCBCB 

Fire, Ice, Desire, Fire, Twice, Hate, Ice, Great, Suffice. 

These last words that rhyme also pretty much carry the bulk of the poem.  The last words of any poem usually provide us, the readers, with a brief understanding on what the poem is talking about and in this case, the fire and ice methods both appear here with connections to certain emotions and specifically, information about Frost's preferences. 

Obviously Frost is talking about death so either method, fire or ice,  would result in the same outcome; therefore, the method itself must hold its own importance. 


Frost prefers fire and Frost puts it first in the poem.

Frost explicitly says that he himself favors fire over ice.  There are many different ways by which Frost shows us this; one of which is explicitly stating it in the poem.  The other methods, however, are not as explicit, but rather more implicit. 


Method #1: Alliteration 


The alliteration in the line, "Favor" and "Fire", calls attention to the fact that fire is like to passion and overall emotion. Frost also links his own favor to the element of destruction.  Based on this emphasis, we can figure out that Frost prefers to be ended by a force that is alive and not by ice that is emotionless and the exact opposite of fire.



Method #2: Ignoring name sakes

Robert Frost does not want to die by frost until the second time he courts death and is sure to die.  Frost's last name is FROST, which is an offshoot of actual ice and cold weather.  The fact that Frost ignored this connection to himself, chose fire first, and also placed Fire before Ice on the poem lines indicates that Frost prefers fire in every way and wants to make certain that that preference is reflected in all aspects of the poem.




Method #3: Placing Ice 2nd

Most people find doing thing twice tedious and annoying.   These feelings can often result in hatred, which is an emotion that can be linked to Ice if that hate is a cold hate. If someone like Frost had to die twice, he most certainly would hate death for making him go through it twice; therefore, Ice as a second choice accommodates the feeling of cold and unforgiving hatred for having to die twice. 



 Method #4: Is it good or is it great?
     
       
         VS. 

When people describe what they love, they like to over embellish and affix adjectives like "amazing" and "perfect" to those loved objects.  Frost's description of Ice, as a force of death and destruction, is found in this line: "It is also great/And would suffice".  At first, readers would think that Ice was "great" in the sense that it was not a force to be reckoned with and has significant power, but we quickly realize as we keep reading that that is not what Frost intends to mean.  He is not over embellishing Ice, but rather, he is describing it as "sufficient".  It is the word "suffice" that throw us off the idea we initially perceived by the word "great".  The  juxtaposition of these two words, "great" and "suffice", are exact opposites just like Fire and Ice and they both play into Frost's preference for fire over ice.  Ice, even though it suffices in its role as the death reaper, is not as great as Fire, giving "great" a double meaning.  This double meaning places Ice as a "great" force that is capable, but not the best or most amazing force out there.   





In the end, Frost shows us that he prefers Fire to Ice in all ways.








Monday, February 8, 2016

Golden Shovel--"Gospel" by Panic at the Disco


Away! By an Imperfect Imposter



I’m supposed to be scared of the dark ‘cause
there is no burning fire lighting the way. These
maps that cloud my mind are just inoperative words.
“Guide me!” but where am I going? Are
all my destinations harboring secret knives?
Metal and pen mark up my world, so much that
the sky is starting to bleed with firefly blood. Often,
rather than sometimes, they leave me behind and leave.
These are the places and faces that leave scars.
It is the fear
                         of



















Flip this upside down












Monday, February 1, 2016

Commentary on the Light Bulbs in the Sky



What do you think of when you see stars at night?




           What was I looking for?  Look up.  Look to the sky.  Look at the expanse.  What do you see?  Galileo saw stars.  I wonder if that was what he was looking for...  Doesn't mater, either way he saw his future. 

            I can't remember where I first saw this.  It might have been just an coincidence.  I don't think I was looking for a line--NOT poetry, that's for sure.  Perhaps what I wanted was a word.  A single word that could explain the phenomenon that is starlight.  Perhaps I just googled the word "stars" and it came up on Google Images.   



See? There it is again! 
       Different colors, different fonts.  Some are drawn, some painted and some are just pictures with this caption.  It is the same, always the same, in the end.  It is the one line that seems to haunt me.  Haunting me just like the darkness that did not haunt Galileo, even when there are no stars in the sky....or are there always? 


           It is my fundamental belief that one day the stars are just going to fall out of the sky. NOT because they have "burned out" as some scientists have claimed they some day would, but because they are sick and tired of us ignoring them.  I mean think about it!  We turn on our City Lights and poof! there goes all the stars in the tri-state area.  I'm convinced this is why stars favor farms and woodlands... they always let them shine there.

See?.... and look how they shine!...


             I did some research.  Some people say Galileo was burned at stake, for heresy of course, trying to convince people the Earth revolved around the sun and not the other way around.  (My advice on that: be weary of the clergy)

.......He wasn't scared of the dark.  He was too busy.  Fearing the night, the dark, was not even an option. 
Why? Why was fear not even a possibility?  

    Because it couldn't be.

(If you did't get that one, you should really rethink your priorities)




Where is the one place you can see the softest of lights?  A place where light bulbs in the sky can shine without a prehistoric ball of gas over-shadowing a fledgling reality?

Only in the darkest of nights.



You can't be afraid of the dark when it holds within it a force of nature. Sometimes you search your whole life for something, only to find it when you can no longer see what's before you.  The stars always shine, even when you aren't looking.  I think J.R.R Tolkien knew this, I think he read these lines while he was thinking up the Elves in the Lord of the Rings... (Turn it in flagged it in 1937)
  


Fondly Fearful. F-E-A-R-F-U-L.  F-O-N-D-L-Y.  Full of fear.  What did he think of when he looked at stars?  Was he trying to find out why the stars were so interesting, why their starlight was so consuming?  Did he see Wonder personified in tiny white Christmas tree lights that were found in the clearance bin at Michael's?  I wonder if he ever found what he was looking for.  I wonder if it was all worth his clergy-inflicted, too-early and irreversible end.


(Don't forget this one)

Scratch that: I believe there are beautiful things seen by the astronomers.



I don't know if Galileo ever found what he was seeking, searching for and staying up all night.  He loved the stars too much to succumb to fear, and for the stars in the sky he died.  These few lines, statement, poem, words are more of a legacy than a spider ever left.  In the end, the world of wonder and the world of starry did collide.





(Play both videos simultaneously, with Video 2 muted)















So tell me now, what do you think of when you see stars at night?