Thursday, February 25, 2010

The Tables Turned: An Evening Scene on the Same Subject

The Tables Turned

In contrast to “Expostulation and Reply”, “The Tables Turned” has a tone that is hopeful and exuberant. The speaker in this ballad is calling out to his friends, telling them to drop their books and end their studies. He then describes many situations where nature is able to teach man more about life than any book ever could and that you should “Let Nature be your teacher”. Wordsworth uses the word ‘let” in this ballad and this changes the way Nature can be viewed as the teacher. He isn’t saying that Nature is the sort of teacher that requires work and effort to gain knowledge. Instead, humans just have to be open and ready to receive the wisdom nature has to offer. Humans should not be too analytical in their experience of nature either, “Our meddling intellect/ Mishapes the beauteous forms of things”. I think Wordsworth is trying to explain that the simplest experience of nature teaches us the most about life, and that if we become too investigative in our experience of nature we are missing the knowledge and wisdom nature can offer. A very Romantic sentiment indeed.


Thursday, February 18, 2010

The Marinere, Goody Blake, and Simon Lee: More in Common than Just Being Old?

There is a similarity between the Ancient Marinere, Goody Blake, and Simon Lee that I noticed after reading all three ballads. All three are old, wizened people leading difficult and undesirable lives. They all seem to come from a different time when people were closer and more dependent upon nature, and now they seem painfully out of place and alienated. The Marinere walks the earth in his old age, telling his story from his life on the ocean to unsuspecting youth. Goody Blake essentially scavenges and survives only on what she can glean. Simon Lee is considerably past his prime and his family barely survives off of a small public plot of land. All three of them make the young person they encounter less happy than they had been before. The three ballads ending in the young and modern person’s mourning, suffering, and sadness makes me think that these three ballads represent man’s alienation from nature and the sadness that comes from this. The Marinere, Goody Blake, and Simon Lee represent that dying connection to nature. Alienation from nature and the deep sadness that arises from it are both important themes to the Romantics.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Goody Blake and Harry Gill- A True Story


As I read this lyrical ballad, I was immediately reminded of the movie Drag Me to Hell. If you who haven’t seen the film, the general plot follows a slightly more disturbing version of Goody Blake and Harry Gill. Here is the trailer:

Drag Me to Hell

So in both stories there is an attractive young person who is able to help a poor old woman and they decide they won’t. In Harry Gill’s case, Goody Blake prays to God to keep Harry cold for the rest of his life. In Drag Me to Hell Christine Brown does not give Mrs. Ganush an extension on her loans, thus evicting her. Mrs. Ganush attacks Christine in a parking garage until she rips a button of her coat and puts a curse on it. This curse calls upon a demon to (you guessed it) drag her to hell. Both Harry Gill and Christine Brown learn an important lesson about helping those in need, and they suffer because of their selfishness for the rest of their lives. I think it is really fantastic that a film used the same basic story structure as a lyrical ballad from 1798. I suppose the lesson is timeless.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere

Rime of the Ancient Mariner Part 1

Rime of the Ancient Mariner Part 2


While searching for other media that was related to The Rime of the Ancyent Mariner, I found a song by Iron Maiden appropriately titled “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” which breaks up different parts of the narrative with different styles of music. Iron Maiden begins with a fast and dynamic power ballad that follows the story of the Mariner until Life-in-Death wins his soul. The next section includes a haunting musical interlude that I can only assume represents the strange events that take place after the Mariner is cursed, and an eerie voice reads the portion of the ballad where the men of the ship all die. The music changes again to a calmer but swiftly moving tune as the Mariner begins to pray and the albatross is removed from his shoulders. The song resumes its musical style used at the beginning to tell the rest of the tale. I think it was really original to represent different portions of the story by using various tempos, volumes, and intensity. The structure they created in this song helped me understand more the strange events of this lyrical ballad. I really would love to hear what they would have produced to tell the story of what happens on the ship after the Mariner was cursed and before the curse is lifted.