Monday, April 20, 2009

Kyle's Essay

The Women of Sentimentalism:
An Essay on Three Pieces of Literature and how they connect to the Word Sentimental

TS: “The world is neither wise nor just, but it takes up for its folly and injustice by being damnably sentimental.” (Thomas Henry Huxley) SD: Sentimentalism is used by everyone in the world at one point. CM: Ms. Dickinson, Ms. Nye, and Laura all show signs of being sentimental. CM: They each show sentimentalism towards something; Dickinson towards her poems, Nye towards the small things in life, and Laura towards people in general.

TS: The whole tone of the poem “The Traveling Onion” is sentimental towards onions, which Nye uses as a metaphor to the small things in life. SD: Naomi Shihab Nye uses an excess of sentiment towards the onion. CM: She says that she could “kneel and praise” such an insignificant thing. CM: She says that when an onion is cut into “a history [is] revealed”, which is ridiculous of course, but shows her adulation of the onion. SD: She also perhaps thinks too deeply about the onion. CM: In the second stanza she explains how we never appreciate the onion for what it truly is; something "small and forgotten". CM: An example of this is when she says “at meal, we sit to eat / . . . , commenting on texture of meat [. . .] but never on the translucence of onion.” CM: Its very surprising that even a poet could have so much to say about something so little.

TS: Ms. Nye and Laura, a character from “The Garden Party”, think alike because they both tend to exaggerate about things. SD: Laura had the best of intentions at heart, but she went overboard when she concerned herself with the family of a dead man. CM: She praised him as if he was much more than a carcass that was waiting to rot. CM: She even refers to him as “wonderful” and “beautiful” and even calls him a “marvel.” SD: Laura, being the kind soul she is, got so worked up after seeing his body she had come out crying, yet happier than ever. CM: One would think that seeing a dead man’s body would be a traumatic experience. CM: Even when her brother, Laurie, asks “Was it awful?” she answers “No [. . .] it was marvelous.” CS: Being kind and caring is always nice, but there is an ad nauseum for everything and Laura’s prying into somebody else’s affairs got to be very querulous.

TS: Laura was too susceptible and Emily Dickinson seems to show no sensibility at all in her poem “I’m Nobody”. SD: Ms. Dickinson, being known for her often confusing and obscure writings, used little visible sensibility in many of her poems. CM: The readers of her poems often don’t have the faintest clue what she is writing about. CM: However, in lines such as “how public like a frog to tell your name [. . .] to an admiring bog” one has to really pay close attention to make a connection. CM: Maybe the connection is between a “frog” and yourself and an “admiring bog” and meddlesome people. SD: One of the dictionary definitions of “sensibility” is the “awareness of and responsiveness toward something” so maybe she had ulterior motives for making her poems so abnormal. CM: Maybe Ms. Dickinson did have a hidden point behind her poems, but she wanted her readers to use their sensibility to uncover it. CM: However, maybe she simply wrote what came to her mind and didn’t intend for it to have any meaning at all. CS: Sometimes the most beautiful things in life are the simple things and maybe this is what Ms. Dickinson was trying to tell people through her poetry.

TS: Most people are naturally born with a sense of sentimentalism and are led by their emotions. SD: People base what they do on their sentimentalism. CM: Laura’s sensibility led her to care about the feelings of other. CM: Even Ms. Nye’s sentimentalism has led her to care about the small things in life.

Key
Purple-S-V Split
Blue-Appositive
Bold-FAST Words

2 comments:

Ty aka Mr Halo said...

Kyle, I love how you started with a qoute to get the essay focused in and to keep it moving. I think that "Sendimentalism" isnt the right use of the word snedimental, maybe use "_____ was sendimental toward _______". also,make all significant words in the sub title begin with capital letters.

tristan yerkes said...

Kyle,
first off, you are THE MAN and your writing is epic beyond the realms of The Odyssey. I really liked you use of S-V split when you said, "Ms. Dickinson, being known for her often confusing and obscure writings, used little visible sensibility in many of her poems." 'twas great. I just think you may want to rethink your use of a quote for an introduction, I'm not saying it is horrible (its actually a great quote) but you may want to consider the possibility of people thinking too much about the quote and not enough about your essay. I also think you may want to look over your conclusion. It's very great, and gets the point across,but you may want to refer to the intro to beef it up a little more. Otherwise, YOU ARE THE MAN KYLE!!!