The poem I decided to compare to myself to is titled," Sometimes When It Rains" by Gcina Mhlope on page 148. This poem has a lot similarities and differences from me.First the speaker is not a child anymore like me. I also like to sit and meditate, daydream, and think while it's raining. When it rains I think of homeless and what they are doing to shelter themselves from the rain. Just as the speaker wonders why people need clothes, I think of why people would spend one thousand on a regular t-shirt. Also why does buying clothes help people feel better about themselves. I also let my mind wonder when I'm just sitting back and relaxing. When the speaker wondered about why goats run from water and sheep's embrace; I wonder why dogs love water …show more content…
I can remember times I wondered about Mary in the bible giving birth in an animal shelter. I wonder how was weather, how did she being rejected and having to result in giving birth there. I think of police chases often. Just a couple days ago I was leaving one of my dances performances at a church on Detroit's eastside. I puled out the parking lot and in a slit moment I seen a car coming right at me head on. Just in a split second we both moved about an inch just in time. Then right after a police zoom by chasing the car that almost had a head on collision with me. I wondered why was the police chasing them, Why would they put others in danger, was what ever they did worth it. Just as the speaker wonders about prisoners I also do the same. I have a cousin who spent the majority of his life in prison. I wondered how he felt in there and what was it like. I think about all the people who are in prison that are innocent.I wonder have they lost hope, are their hearts turning cold. When it rains I look out the window and see it as a piece of art. The way the wind is blowing the rain making it curve, bending the trees and
When we got to the prison, I was surprised to see multiple buildings all around a center courtyard. The inmates were dressed in green or gray and were busy doing various activities. The first thing that really swept me off my feet was when we visited the inmates near the gym in the knitting room. The things they were making required so much talent, which is something I had never considered prisoners to have, mostly because I had never thought about it. I was even more shocked by the talent of the brick layers and the high success rate that is found in the inmates that
Life can bring unexpected events that individuals might not be prepared to confront. This was the case of O’Brien in the story, “On the Rainy River” from the book The Things They Carried. As an author and character O’Brien describes his experiences about the Vietnam War. In the story, he faces the conflict of whether he should or should not go to war after being drafted. He could not imagine how tough fighting must be, without knowing how to fight, and the reason for such a war. In addition, O’Brien is terrified of the idea of leaving his family, friends and everything he loves behind. He decides to run away from his responsibility with the society. However, a feeling of shame and embarrassment makes him go to war. O’Brien considers
Prisons are not a place that anybody wants to revisit once out. Another poem Baca wrote while in prison is penned, “Immigrants in Our Own Land”, the title of the poem relates to the idea of the prisoners moving into their jail cells. The “Own Land” Baca is talking about is the jail, the jail is now a new home to the prisoners, who Baca refers to them as immigrants. When Baca got to prison he was stripped of his clothes and the belongings he had with him, just like what happens to immigrants when they go to a new land. In this poem it states, “We are given shots and doctors ask questions. Then we gather in another room where counselors orient us to the new land we will now live in. We take tests” (“Immigrants”). In this line, Baca talks about the tier that he was put on after beating up a man the was in his cell with him. The tier he is put on is with all the mentally insane inmates. Once Baca got to this tier he came to a realization that poetry was transforming him. Baca realized that if it wasn’t for poetry he would have killed his cellmate. Baca tells his memoir readers that he heard voice in his head saying, “How can you kill and still be a poet? How can you ever write another poem if you disrespect life in this manner? Do you know you will forever be changed by this act? It will haunt you to your dying breath” (Baca 206). Since Baca has been reading so much poetry the voices of the poets stayed within his mind like his conscious that help him make the right decision. On the Nut Run tier, the guards would come around with carts full of medications and give them to all the inmates on this floor. In Baca’s memoir, he states, “ The zombies only stirred when the meds cart was coming or when a white-coated intern would show up to recruit subjects for some new drug or shock therapy. All of them were blank-eyed, seldom out of their cells, and they never combed or washed unless told to do it”
After reading the book I have gained a new understanding of what inmates think about in prison. Working in an institution, I have a certain cynical attitude at times with inmates and their requests.
In Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte, numerous references are made to different conditions of weather. Even the title of the novel suggests the storminess present in nearly the entire book. The often-changing weather serves to signify the characters’ personalities, as well as the changes that they go through during the course of their lives.
Imagine loving a stranger but knowing you’re unable to be with them, Dana Gioia perfectly shows this in his poem “Summer Storm”. As Gioia’s poem is read, one can conclude that the speaker feels a love towards a stranger and feels the love back for a moment. Unfortunately is unable to be with this person because nothing was pursued. One could conclude that the love is forbidden or our other person is unsure of who they want to be with or who they are. Gioia uses rhyming in his poem to help the readers gain a personal connection to it; he also uses end rhyming in the second and fourth rows of each stanza. Gioia uses enjambment as well, which can be viewed as a run-on sentence used in a poem. He uses tone in his poem, which allows the reader to feel the pain of the speaker as he goes through a heart-wrenching experience, but also experience the feeling of a short relief as the speaker experiences someone having interest in him. When one finishes the poem one can identify that the speaker is also the author.
Rain was a sweet escape,that lent me a sort of solace,humanity failed to possess.It soothed me with each pelt and seemed to wash away my worries.
The Rain Man stars Dustin Hoffman and Tom Cruise. The movie was made in 1988. The movie is about an autistic man named Raymon, who is a idiot savant played by Dustin Hoffman and his fast, talking self absorbed, egocentric brother Charlie Babbitt, who is played by Tom Cruise. A egocentric person is a person with the simple recognition that every living thing views the world from a unique, self-oriented perspective(LIFE: Inherently Egocentric written by James Craig Green http://pw2.netcom.com/~zeno7/ego.html).
In “There Will Come Soft Rains” Ray Bradbury suggests that technology is very destructive and dehumanizing. Bradbury shows this through talking about a house in the year 2026 that does everything for the humans that live in it. The house makes their food, cleans the dishes, cleans the house, and even reads to them. To some people this may sound like a good thing, but Bradburry shows how the house is not a human and it just is not the same. These are things people are meant to do and can have some meaning. Having a house doing nearly everything for you truly is dehumanizing. When he describes the houses jobs he makes them sound useless. The movements are useless because there are no people in the house, due to what Bradbury suggests was an atomic bomb by writing that the house was the only one not destroyed in a whole city, and there was a green radioactive glow throughout the city. Another way bradbury showed the house was destructive was when
Released in 1988, writers Ronald Bass and Barry Morrow created a compelling story by introducing many to the world of autism. These two writers brilliantly plotted the dramatic story of a brother's greed developing into love in the 1988 Oscar winning movie Rain Man. Charlie Babbitt, the first main character played by Tom Cruise, is an arrogant, selfish businessman, striving to be wealthy, but his business is failing. The second main character in the film is Raymond Babbitt, played by Dustin Hoffman, who is an autistic savant who lives and is cared for at a mental institution. Charlie receives word that his father, whom he hasn't had contact with in years, has deceased. His father left an inheritance to Charlie and his unknown (or
This week’s reading focused on prisons. The Society of Captives was written by Gresham M. Sykes in 1958. He conducted a study on a maximum security prison in New Jersey. Chapter 1 focused on the prison and its settings. The author goes into detail about the size of the cells and what the prison actually looks like. He also writes about how the prisoner is no longer seen as man but as a number. My Sunday school teacher visits prisons to teach about the bible. He has commented to me that is exactly how certain correction officers see the prisoners. They are nothing but a number to some individuals. This can lower their self-image (Sykes, 1958).
Released in 1951, Singin in the Rain was one of the last films to be produced during the profitable golden age of the studio system. It evokes the typical characteristics of the popular MGM Hollywood musical by relying on superstar names and infectious dance numbers. However, Singin in the Rain incorporates an additional level of parody into its nostalgic plot that focuses on the disruptive shift from silent movies to "talkies." The film showcases classical Hollywood musical numbers supplemented by affectionate satire. The music of the film reflects each inherent level and in doing so becomes an identifiable character. It helps to add irony to the plot as well as comedic support. Singin in the Rain "glorifies American entertainment" while
Essay on the setting of “August 2026: There Will Come Soft Rains” by Ray Bradbury
It’s cool and dark outside of the car as we drive, dark clouds hovering over the plains as fat, heavy drops of water fall from the full clouds. The lights of cars and streetlights and cars blur with the flow of water on the side windows, our speed not fast enough to force the drops to flow back along the windows. It’s not until we start on the highway and the water starts to move that I find my objects of interest in front of me in the form of the rain and the memories of my childhood that surface with them.
Before the Rain, filmed on location in the Republic of Macedonia and in London is a trilogy that focuses on the conflict between Muslims and Orthodox Christians in the Balkans. The three chapters of the trilogy are " Words," " Faces" and " Pictures." Director Milcho Manchevski states; " Before the Rain, refers to the feeling of heavy expectation, when the skies are pregnant with the possibility of an outburst, when people are silent, waiting for a tragedy of cleansing"(1).