Preview

Memorization and Reflection for Keats’s Lamia

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1167 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Memorization and Reflection for Keats’s Lamia
Sample Project 1 Reflection

Memorization and Reflection for Keats’s Lamia

For this exam, I decided to memorize the description of Lamia’s snake-woman appearance to force myself into a very careful close reading that would help me with the term paper for this class. This passage is the first visual impression the reader gets of Lamia, and Keats depicts her as a creature whose appearance overflows with striking sensual detail that ultimately cannot be sufficiently described in language. I began memorizing the poem two lines at a time whenever I found a few minutes to spare—the five minutes before a class began, my morning bus ride, etc. I even posted each day’s lines as my status on Facebook, so even my leisure time was inflected with Lamia for about a week. My memorization process was stolen from my childhood days of piano lessons. As a child, I would learn a piece of music by breaking it into sections, mastering a section at a time and after each section returning to top to do the whole piece as far as I had learned. Because the majority of the passage is a catalogue of her physical features, the most difficulty I had with the memorization was learning which articles and conjunctions Keats uses where. Keats’s repeated use of “a” in the multiple comparisons reiterates her variable coloration and patterns. She is not “striped like the zebra” because that would make her illustrative of a type. The zebra connotes a single understanding of what “zebra” is, but a zebra recognizes the uniqueness inherent in each creature within the species. Therefore, Lamia is her own unique rendering of a unique zebra and her features cannot be contained in the typical features of the zebra, the leopard, or the peacock. Interestingly, the word “some” works similarly to “a” in that it allows for variability and multiplicity. “Some penanced lady elf,” and “some demon’s mistress” indicate that Lamia could compare to a host of lady elves or any number of demons’

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    You are to create a representation of TWO of the poems studied in class and…

    • 1375 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Construct a close reading of this poem that demonstrates your awareness of the poet’s body of work.…

    • 1196 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    On the both poems, D. H. Lawrence’s “snake” and Elizabeth bishop’s “Fish,” both author mentions about animals. Both writer treated animals as animals at first, but later on, they compare those animals with human. The explanation of visual, the time when two authors think those animals as human, and the ironic feeling that both author have demonstrate that both speakers state of mind change.…

    • 790 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Medusa Sarton

    • 1067 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Use Audre Lorde's "Poetry is Not a Luxury" and T. de Lauretis's "Desire in Narrative" to read May Sarton's poem "The Muse as Medusa." Expand May Sarton's project of remaking/retaking the gaze by examining what Audre Lorde and T. de Lauretis understand about the power of looking.…

    • 1067 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Glasgow 5th March 1971

    • 1369 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Choose a poem which describes a scene or incident vividly. Briefly state what is being described and then go on to show how the poetic techniques used make the description vivid.…

    • 1369 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    He clearly explains the fact that art never dies. Cassandra Hilton once expressed the thought, “with time, art only becomes more valuable.” It is the only thing in this world that will still be looked at in centuries to come. For example, the art we look at today is in fact very old, yet we still show an abundant amount of interest in it. Yeats explains, “For every tatter in its mortal dress, nor is there singing in school but studying monuments of its own magnificence (Lines 12-14).” In other words, he is acknowledging the idea that students still study art. Adrienne Rivera furthers the thought by saying, “the day the world stops caring, art will still be around to intimidate.” Art will literally never die, it will be around forever and people will always write about it or look with great interest. The speaker in this poem wants to come back as art so he will never be forgotten or…

    • 1023 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Indentured servants were an important piece of establishing colonies in North America. They first arrived in America in the decade following the settlement of Jamestown by the Virginia Company in the sixteenth century (PBS, n.d.). The growth of tobacco and other crops created a tremendous need for labor in the early colonies. With this need came many changes, problems and unintended consequences of using indentured servants.…

    • 653 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    * Demonstrate an active and contributory role within the group discussion process to produce a mind-map. Students will focus their group discussions and evidence on what they feel is the meaning of the poem, but also demonstrate their understanding of the tone of the poem, the use of language, the structure of the poem and poetic techniques used. Students must also discuss and evidence their understanding of the social, historical and cultural features which they feel are explicit and implicit within the poem and whether they feel the poem has relevance in today’s society (1.1)…

    • 684 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gwendolyn Brooks ' "First fight. Then Fiddle" initially seems to argue for the necessity of brutal war in order to create a space for the pursuit of beautiful art. The poem is more complex, however, because it also implies both that war cannot protect art and that art should not justify war.…

    • 708 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This poem is about the poet observing nature and comparing it to humans. The poet watches the orb spider spin its web and the orb spider teaches the human world lessons through out the poem.…

    • 479 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    When you have completed your exam and reviewed your answers, click Submit Exam. Answers will not be recorded until you…

    • 639 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Clugston, R. W. (2010). Poems for Reflection. In Journey into literature (chapter 12 section 2).…

    • 2111 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Discuss how your investigation of the generic conventions of poetry has influenced your understanding of at least one poem that you have studied in this unit.…

    • 1231 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Girl with a Pearl Earring

    • 2758 Words
    • 12 Pages

    1. In Girl With a Pearl Earring, Tracy Chevalier treats us to a richly appointed portrait of intersecting faiths, fracturing family dynamics, erotic awakenings, community scandals, religious tensions, and aesthetic compromises—all filtered brilliantly through the eyes of the young narrator, Griet, whose concise, wide-eyed perspective functions much like Vermeer’s camera obscura, rendering with particularly sharp precision and subtle insight the character of seventeenth-century Delft itself. “The camera obscura helps me to see in a different way, to see more of what is there,” Vermeer muses. Discuss the way in which Chevalier’s writing style achieves a similar effect. What techniques does she use to establish the novel’s particular tone and tension, to enrich the imagery, to develop her characters’ motives, and to encourage us “to see more of what is there”? 2. In the particular emotional realm of this novel, the issue of “seeing” is central. Griet endeavors for much of the novel to manipulate all that she sees into a sort of harmony, beginning with the soup vegetables she so carefully arranges so that they will not “fight when they are side by side.” Likewise, Vermeer’s art relies upon his ability to see the universal in even the most prosaic settings. Griet’s father cannot see at all, and not coincidentally, he is perhaps the novel’s most tragic and impotent figure. What does “seeing” mean to the novel’s other characters? Is it fair to say that, of all the characters, it is Maria Thins who sees the most clearly in the end? 3. Compare Girl With a Pearl Earring to other historical novels you’ve read in recent years (e.g.: Jane Smiley’s The Greenlanders, A. S. Byatt’s Possession, Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace, and so on). How does Chevalier's novel—focused, detailed, and tightly framed as it is—complement, complicate, and/or depart altogether from the standard themes and trappings of…

    • 2758 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In this essay I will try to compare two poems, the first of which is by D. H. Lawrence entitled Snake. The second is by Sylvia Plath and is entitled Medallion. I will compare the language used, the structure, the theme and the tone of each poem.…

    • 1595 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics