Monday, May 11, 2015

NIGHT’S DREAM

                               NIGHT’S DREAM

                               I do waNder every where
                                             I must go and seek some dewdrops
                                        in Grove or green
                        by moonligHt
                                           sTolen away from the fairy land
                        joy and proSperity

                       since the miDdle summer’s spring
                          dance our Ringlets to the whistling wind
                  the quaint mazEs in the autumn green
                                       do Abound
       in the fresh lap of criMson rose.


note: phrases from MSND, Act Second, Scene First

Friday, May 8, 2015

playful until the end

What's in a name?

“What’s in a name?”
Yes. A name indicates an identity. But because their families are mortal enemies both of them can not escape their names. 

Another scene again in Juliet’s balcony when Romeo is saying goodbye to Juliet before he is banished to Mantua. They hear a bird sings: is it a nightingale singing in the night or is it a lark signifying dawn? Romeo has to live before dawn because to stay means death.Juliet: “It is not yet near day./It was the nightingale, and not the lark.”
Romeo: “It was the lark, the herald of the morn,/No nightingale.”

The nightingale keeps them together longer while the lark means separation.

Even at the end in their death their words are playful, with a touch of a bitter humor in the midst of death, she has the heart to say: (Romeo) “left no friendly drop to help me after.”


They are young. They are bold and dare to love against all the odds. They die faithful to each other and with their integrity intact.



Saturday, May 2, 2015

opening lines

I’m taking an eCourse, Shakespeare in Community, through the University of Wisconsin-Madison. One of the first things is to reflects on the opening lines. In Romeo and Juliet: "Two households, both alike in dignity."

"Two households, both alike in dignity." Two families both alike in dignity.Relationship changes the equation of the family when one member interacts with others who are perceived as enemies or of different culture, philosophy or beliefs.

Juliet asks, “What’s in a name?” Why put constraints, limits, scope, in one’s life? Forgiveness goes to the periphery and ignored. To invoke diplomacy is like a dishonor to their names. It seems effeminate as if to seek peace is cowardice.

"Two households, both alike in dignity,” but change when they face each.

Friday, April 10, 2015

fini & continue

The Confessions of St. Augustine
I finished reading the book today.
I have been doing my walk 4 days a week.
Now I have to continue the pursuit of an idea for things worthy of commitment.

Saturday, April 4, 2015

What is time?

The Confessions of St. Augustine
I’m passing through Book XI. Augustine meditating about time.
“This is my hope; for this do I live, that I may contemplate the delights of the Lord...God grant to men to see in a small thing ideas common to things great and small.”

I walked for the last 2 days.

Monday, March 30, 2015

Reading challenge, on time

The Restless Flame. I finished Book VII.
The Confessions of St. Augustine. I finished Book X
Augustine was baptized in the Catholic Church. His mother, Monica, died.

I walked to the river on Saturday. Today worked out in the gym.

Saturday, March 28, 2015

conversion

"How lovely I now find it to be free from the loveliness of vanities, so that now it is a joy to renounce what I had been  so afraid to lose…And I can talk to you as friends talk, my glory and my riches and my salvation, my Lord God.”
-The Restless Flame, A Novel about St. Augustine, by Louis de Wohl
note: I’m at Book VII. 60 pages to go. The challenge started March 16.