Summary of Solitary Reaper
Summary of Solitary Reaper
Summary of Solitary Reaper
HeSUMMARY
OF SOLITARY REAPER
poem
Solitary
***
SUMMARY
THE SOLITARY REAPER
The
poem
The
Solitary
William
Wordsworth.
Once
Being touched and emotional he narrates the solitary reaper who cuts the
grain with a sickle and sings. He then carries in his heart the echoes of the song
which haunt him for long.
***
SUMMARY
THE SEVEN AGES
The Seven Ages of Man is taken
from William Shakespeares famous play,
As You Like It (Act-II, Scene-VII),
describes the seven phases in a mans lifefrom childhood to old age. The world is but
a global stage and all men and women
presented here are mere puppets in the
hands of destiny. Just like the infrastructures
of a stage, the world has its own entrances
and exits. Every man in his full lifetime has
many parts to play. His total number of acts
in his lifetime is the seven ages.
The first and foremost act of
every human being is the stage of infancy, where he makes his presence
felt by crying at the top of his voice and many a times vomiting any food
or drink that is repulsive, at the nursing arms of his mother. This period
normally last till four years of age. The second stage is the whining
schoolboy where he learns to utter a plaintive, high-pitched, protracted
sound, as in pain, fear, supplication, or complaint. His shiny morning face
and his satchel; a small bag, sometimes with a shoulder strap; he creeps
like
a
snail
and
not
willing
to
go
to
school.
The third stage is his early youth, the peak of love and high
romance. He sighs like a burning furnace and sings the sad ballads of
romance; full of woe; affected with, characterized by, or indicating woe:
woeful melodies; to impress his lovers heart. The impression of her reply
can be seen in her eyebrows. The fourth stage is that of a soldier where
life if full of obligations, commitments, compliances, oaths and
vows. His beard is like a leopard or panther. He endlessly fights for his
honor, a full presence of mind which is sudden and quick in quarrel and a
heart
to
maintain
a
dignified
reputation.
The fifth stage is the adult-hood where a man tries to live a fair and
justified life. His belly becomes bigger than normal. He is conscious
about his diet and consumes a good intake of capon; a cockerel
castrated to improve the flesh for use as food. His eyes are severe with
seriousness and his beard is leveled to a formal cut. He is to take a lot of
correct decisions to keep up with the ever changing times. So this stage is
the most powerful stage in life.
***
worthy a friend and fellow alive as was our Shakespeare" (qtd. in Miller 86-87).
Shakespeare also wrote some book-length narrative poetry in 1592-1594, when the
Black Plague closed London theaters down. The most memorable of these writings
"Venus and Adonis" and "The Rape of Lucrece" (Fields 56). It is through the
dedication of these longer works to Earl of Southampton that causes many scholars
to believe that the Earl must have not only been Shakespeare's friend but also his
benefactor, although there is no written proof of this claim (Miller 82). Shakespeare
also composed many sonnets during this two year period, which "were published
without his consent in 1609" (Miller 82).
Shakespeare did not explode on the London scene without criticism. One of the most
notable of his critics was "Robert Greene, a London playwright" ("Shakespeare's Bio"
1) who in 1592 wrote that Shakespeare was "...an upstart crow, beautified with our
feathers, that with his Tiger's heart wrapped in a player's hide, supposes he is as well
to bombast our a blank verse as the best of you: and being an absolute Johnnes fac
totum, is in his own conceit the only Shake-scene in a country" ("Shakespeare's Bio"
1-2). Despite the criticism (or some believe jealousy) he received in London,
Shakespeare prospered into not only a famous playwright, but also an owner of
substantial property and partner of the theatrical company The Globe, which was
"the most successful [company] in London in his day" ("Shakespeare's Bio" 2). His
success allowed him to purchase a comfortable home and retire in Stratford-UponAvon in 1611.
Shakespeare wrote his Last Will and Testament in 1611, leaving the vast majority of
his numerous assets to his daughter Susanna. In "Shakespeare's Last Will &
Testament" Shakespeare leaves Susanna "all my barnes, stables, Orchardes,
gardens, landes, tenements and herediaments ...within the townes and Hamletts,
villages, ffieldes and groundes of Stratford upon Avon, Oldstratford, Bushopton and
Welcombe or in anie of them in the saied countie of warr" (2). It is said that
Shakespeare only left his daughter Judith 300, mainly due to the fact that "Judith's
new husband, Thomas Quiney, ...ran afoul of church doctrine and public esteem
before and after the marriage" (qtd. in Miller 1). In his will he states "and the stock
not to be paied unto her soe long as she shalbe marryed" ("Last Will" 1). To his wife
Anne, Shakespeare left "my second best bed with the furniture" ("Last Will" 2). He
also left things to nieces and nephews, his sister Johane Hart, some close friends, and
Susanna's husband John Hall ("Last Will" 1-3).
Shakespeare allegedly died on his birthday in 1616, although some references say
1619 (Miller 164; Mabillard 42). On April 25, 1616 (or 1619), Shakespeare "was
buried...in the chancel of Holy Trinity Church where he had been baptized exactly 52
[or 55] years earlier"
The Peace of Amiens in 1802 allowed Wordsworth and his sister to visit France
again to see Annette and Caroline. They arrived at a mutually agreeable settlement,
and a few months later, after receiving an inheritance owed by Lord Lonsdale since
John Wordsworth's death in 1783, William married Mary Hutchinson. By 1810 they
had five children, but their happiness was tempered by the loss at sea of William's
brother John (1805), the alienation from Coleridge in 1810, and the death of two
children in 1812. In 1813 Wordsworth received an appointment as Distributor of
Stamps for Westmorland, and the 400 per year which went with this post made him
financially secure. The whole family, which included Dorothy, moved to Rydal Mount,
between Grasmere and Rydal Water).
Wordsworth's literary career began with Descriptive Sketches (1793) and
reached an early climax before the turn of the century, with Lyrical Ballads. His
powers peaked with Poems in Two Volumes (1807), and his reputation continued to
grow; even his harshest reviewers recognized his popularity and the originality.
The important later works were well under way. His success with shorter forms
made him the more eager to succeed with longer, specifically with a long, three-part
"philosophical poem, containing views of Man, Nature, and Society, . . having for its
principal subject the sensations and opinions of a poet living in retirement." The
17,000 lines which were eventually published made up only a part of this mammoth
project. The second section, The Excursion, was completed (pub. 1814), as was the
first book of the first part, The Recluse. During his lifetime he refused to print The
Prelude, which he had completed by 1805, because he thought it was unprecedented
for a poet to talk as much about himself unless he could put it in its proper setting,
which was as an introduction to the complete three-part Recluse.
Inspiration gradually failed him for this project, and he spent much of his later
life revising The Prelude. Critics quarrel about which version is better, the 1805 or the
1850, but agree that in either case it is the most successful blank verse epic
since Paradise Lost.
Finally fully reconciled to Coleridge, the two of them toured the Rhineland in
1828. Durham University granted him an honorary Doctor of Civil Law degree in
1838, and Oxford conferred the same honor the next year. When Robert Southey died
in 1843, Wordsworth was named Poet Laureate. He died in 1850, and his wife
published the much-revised Prelude that summer.
****
Nearly 70 years ago, India's greatest living writer in English, took out a brand
new exercise book and wrote in it: "It was Monday morning."
With those four words, Rasipuram Krishnaswamy Narayan (just R.K. Narayan to
most) took off on a journey to that oddly populated fictional continent called
Malgudi, with the young boy Swami and his eclectic mix of friends.
"The very first line I wrote was 'It was Monday morning.' And then I had an idea
of a railway station, a very small railway station, a wayside station. You've seen
the kind of thing, with a platform and trees and a stationmaster.
The railway station to which Swami goes to watch trains arrive and depart: that
was the original idea with which I started 'Swami and Friends'.
But in the actual book it comes last, it comes at the end of the story," wrote
Narayan much later, remembering his first work. The writer turned 94 on Oct 6,
2000.
Despite the overwhelming success of his semi-autobiographical, self-mocking
vignettes of small-town childhood in 'Swami and Friends', Narayan very nearly
missed the call to fame and recognition.
"Deluged under rejection slips", it was only the fortuitous arrival of his
manuscript on well-known writer, Graham Greene's desk, which made his entry
into the "real world" possible.
SAROJI NAIDU
Saroji Naidu also known by
the sobriquet The Nightingale of India
was
child
prodigy,
Indian
an algebra problem, and when she couldn't find the solution she decided to take a
break, and in the same book she wrote her first inspired poetry. She got so
enthused by this that she wrote "The Lady of the Lake", a poem 1300 lines long.
When her father saw that she was more interested in poetry than mathematics or
science, he decided to encourage her. With her father's support, she wrote the play
"Maher Muneer" in the Persian language. Dr. Chattopadhyaya distributed some
copies among his friends and sent one copy to the Nawab of Hyderabad. Reading
a beautiful play written by a young girl, the Nizam was very impressed. The
college gave her a scholarship to study abroad. At the age of 16 she got admitted
to King's College of England.
England
At the age of 16, she traveled to England to study first at King's College London
and later at Girton College, Cambridge. There she met famous laureates of her
time such as Arthur Symons and Edmond Gosse. It was Gosse who convinced
Sarojini to stick to Indian themes-India's great mountains, rivers, temples, social
milieu, to express her poetry. She depicted contemporary Indian life and events.
Her collections "The golden threshold (1905)", "The bird of time (1912)", and "The
broken wing (1912)" attracted huge Indian and English readership.
Works
Her major contribution was also in the field of poetry. Her poetry had
beautiful words that could also be sung. Soon she got recognition as the "Bul
Bule Hind" when her collection of poems was published in 1905 under the title
Golden Threshold. After that, she published two other collections of poems--The
Bird of Time and The Broken Wings. In 1918, Feast of Youth was published.
Later, The Magic Tree, The Wizard Mask and A Treasury of Poems were
published. Mahashree Arvind, Rabindranath Tagore and Jawaharlal Nehru were
among the thousands of admirers of her work. Her poems had English words, but
an Indian soul.
eee