WELCOME STUDENTS!

This is a place for us to discuss openly and honestly the literature we are reading. Here we are all just communicating our thoughts on what we are reading. There are no right and wrong answers. However, you are expected to be polite, mature, and on topic.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

LovE, dEatH, and TiMe...

Renaissance poetry presents looks at three important topics: love, death and time.  Which of the poems/meditations did you enjoy most?  Why?  (The deadline to post a response to this blog is midnight, Friday, October 21, 2011)

9 comments:

Joseph J said...

The poem I liked the best was the poem about love by Shakespeare. I think it was 176. It was the one in Pretty Woman, anyway. I liked it because it reminds that the truest desire of mankind is not power, not money, not glory, but love. If a man has love, he has a better life than any man who has gone without.

Jessie Herron said...

I enjoyed the poems having to deal with love the most mainly because they are relatable still today.

TiffanyT said...

Out of all the poetry we read today, I find Shakespeare's Sonnet 130. I enjoyed this piece because it speaks the truth. As Shakespeare once said, "Do I love you because you are beautiful, or are you beautiful because I love you?" If you love someone, his imperfections can in no way change the way you feel about him. The significant other is simply perfectly and wonderfully made in your eyes. In response to Shakespeare's profound question, I believe true love for someone makes everything about that person beautiful.

Dillon said...

The poem i liked best was the nymphs response because it was straight forward, and more realistic than the piece of poetry it was responding to. It was not a romantization, or a perfect scenario. It is just saying the reality of love.

treyvernaci said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
treyvernaci said...

I personally enjoyed "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" by John Donne. Though I am not a big fan of his other poems, this particular one was very interesting. First off, it can easily be related to today's society. Like we discussed in class, literature lives on forever because it can always be applied. In today's world, people are seen in situations where they must face the death of a person, or a person leaving. Through the way they mourn, one can see if they truly loved that person or not. Secondly, I love the way Donne compares the strength of love to a compass. While one end the compass may move away from the other, one point always sits still and they are still connected as one. Love is like this. Separation does not necessarily result in two components; love keeps people connected. I am glad we had the chance to read this piece, because I actually did enjoy it to the fullest.

Melinda P said...

I enjoyed the poem "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" by John Donne the best. I enjoyed it the most because it related love and marraige to something uncommon, such as a compass. Also I liked how this poem showed that the emotional side of love creates a stronger bond than just the physical side.

Samantha said...

The poems that I most enjoyed were of course the love poems. My favorite quote from one of the love poems was "it is like trying to catch the wind with a net". This came from the poem that was about a man being unable to gain this woman's love no matter how hard he tried. This poem powerfully shows that not much has changed since Shakespeare's time. I can also easily relate to these poems in a way that I did not think possible. I was not a huge fan of poetry until reading Shakespeare's love poems.

Mallory P said...

The poems I enjoyed the most were the ones written by Shakespeare. My favorite was Sonnet 116 because it mentions how love is an "ever-fixed mark" that can not be shaken. I enjoyed it because the sonnet portrays how love can survive any hardships and it can not be broken.