Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Artist of the Beautiful - (Reading Response)

     Artist of the Beautiful is a short story which emphasizes on beauty and what the word "beautiful" really means to each individual.
     We get two different perspectives from two very different characters in the story. One is Peter. He is a hardworking man who has toiled all his life to create and fix watches. So much that he has gone nearly blind from viewing the intricate detail of the tiny watches. He has come to detest his choice of career, saying that it is foolish, and it would indeed be a wonderful thing to be a blacksmith. His view of being a blacksmith is that it is a "wholesome thing to depend on main strength and reality, and to earn one's bread with (his own) bare and brawny arm ... did you ever hear of a blacksmith being a fool?" So clearly he thinks that it would be a beautiful thing to have the qualities of a blacksmith.
      Then we have Owen, a young fellow who has had a deep connection with nature and all that is beautiful in it, since he was just a little child. He sees beauty as something that is not utilitarian, but natural in every sense. He even became physically ill from seeing a steam engine, because it was so unnatural, and he just could not grasp it within his soul. His view of beautiful is something that God made with his very fingers, and created from his very soul. So, to do this he tries to recreate the beautiful...

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Merchant of Venice Reading Journal: Act Two, Scene Five


Firstly, I want to give a summary of the scene. This is Act Two, Scene Five of the Merchant of Venice.

Preparing to leave for Bassanio's dinner party, Shylock meets Lancelot, who is delivering Lorenzo's reply to Jessica. Shylock ridicules his former servant and says that in Lancelot's new job with Bassanio, Lancelot will no longer be able to "sleep and snore" as he was (supposedly) able to do with Shylock. When Jessica finally enters, Shylock gives her the keys to the house and tells her that he is going to  Bassanio's dinner party. He says that he accepted the invitation "in hate". He makes it very clear that he is not excited about attending this dinner. Lancelot urges his former master to go. He has a "feeling" that Bassanio is preparing an elaborate masque as part of the evening's entertainment. Shylock is horrified at the suggestion. He insists that if Jessica hears any sounds of the masque, she is to keep inside.  Despite everything, Shylock finally decides to set out for Bassanio's dinner party, but not before repeating one final warning for Jessica to stay inside. Shylock exits without realizing that Lancelot whispered a word of advice to Jessica before he left: She is to be on watch for "a Christian" who will be "worth a Jewess' eye", Who is obviously Lorenzo.
Alone on the stage, Jessica anticipates her elopement and closes the scene.


If you ask me, there is great importance in this scene. We hear about Jessica and Lorenzo's impending elopement, and we continue to add little pieces to Shylock's character.

I believe that Jessica and Lorenzo's elopement will add greatly to this story. However, I have to ask myself...Is it right? I think that it is not. Especially since her father is so anti-Christian. Although he is very much wrong in his hatred of the Christian faith, she has no buisness tainting his already stained reputation by marrying a Christian against the will of her father. It is a very wrong action on both parts, thus adding to the characters of both and adding to the suspense and action of the play.