Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Canterbury Tales II: What a Character
The Sea Captain's Tale:
The author uses direct characterization to describe the monk, the merchant, and the wife. He starts off by saying the wife is beautiful, the merchant is stingy, and the monk was handsome and well liked. Chaucer's tone is somewhat mocking and sarcastic when he is speaking of the wife and how rich men's beautiful wives like to be sociable and plan parties and buy dresses, but the husband doesn't want to pay for it so they must find some other man to pay for it. The tone is satirical in the case of the monk because the monk is conniving and when the wife asks him for money he secretly borrows it from the husband so that she will sleep with him. It is also ironic because the wife couldn't directly ask the husband for money, and the husband was rich but he wouldn't give money to his wife. The author was also being very ironic when the wife said the husband wasn't good in bed, but at the end he was very...vivacious. Chaucer used a really funny pun at the end when he said, "So my tale ends: and while we live may God give us tail in plenty!" The meaning of the pun was to say he hopes he gets to sleep with a lot of women while he's alive, and the pun was on the words "tale" and "tail". There is a lot of sexual humor in this story especially at the end when the wife says she'll pay her husband back in full for the 100 francs she spent.
The author uses direct characterization to describe the monk, the merchant, and the wife. He starts off by saying the wife is beautiful, the merchant is stingy, and the monk was handsome and well liked. Chaucer's tone is somewhat mocking and sarcastic when he is speaking of the wife and how rich men's beautiful wives like to be sociable and plan parties and buy dresses, but the husband doesn't want to pay for it so they must find some other man to pay for it. The tone is satirical in the case of the monk because the monk is conniving and when the wife asks him for money he secretly borrows it from the husband so that she will sleep with him. It is also ironic because the wife couldn't directly ask the husband for money, and the husband was rich but he wouldn't give money to his wife. The author was also being very ironic when the wife said the husband wasn't good in bed, but at the end he was very...vivacious. Chaucer used a really funny pun at the end when he said, "So my tale ends: and while we live may God give us tail in plenty!" The meaning of the pun was to say he hopes he gets to sleep with a lot of women while he's alive, and the pun was on the words "tale" and "tail". There is a lot of sexual humor in this story especially at the end when the wife says she'll pay her husband back in full for the 100 francs she spent.
Character Study 1
It's weird to think that last year around this time I was
stressing over college applications and personal statements. I've learned a lot
since then, like the fact that college is just like high school except with a
bigger vocabulary, and it's actually cool to be obsessed with coffee and cats.
I was actually really surprised I got in to UCSD considering up until the last
month I had no idea what I was going to write in my essays. Procrastination and
idiocy at its finest. Don't worry I'm only studying the prerequisites for
medical school everyone. And now the surgery scheduling starts flying in, I'm
sure. Anyway, like I said everything is pretty normal, too normal. It's like I
just packed up my crap and my mom dropped me off in to a state of limbo.
"Bye Charlie! I love you!" she said as she drove off in to the
sunset, leaving me in the middle of a nerd congregation. The thing is that I'm
bored, and I forgot to bring Maurice, my five foot tall teddy bear, with me to
school. It’s a good thing I didn't take him though, because San Diego is pretty
sketchy and he would have gotten stolen.
There are two types of people in this
world. There are the people who when a stranger yells, "Someone help me my
cat got away!" will keep walking like assholes. Then there are the people
like me who will immediately start chasing after the alleged cat, and straight
in to the arms of a kidnapper. In my defense we were by a busy intersection and
the cat could have easily gotten ran over. It was my duty as a human being and
cat lover to potentially put my freedom at risk. That being said I would take a
dead cat any day over being bound and blind folded in the back seat of one of
those sketchy, white pedophile vans. Honestly, could you get any more obvious?
These kidnappers are seriously lacking in their profession, and the one next to
me smells like that liquid ass spray. My eyes are watering and I am gagging,
that is so gross. I'm guessing he's not married.
“Let me go you stupid ham planets!” I yell
in the direction of the odorous one. “We can’t! Do you know how much money
we’ll get for kidnapping that guy from The Maze Runner?” said a rather high
pitched male voice. I guess it came from Smelly. “Are you freaking kidding me?
I look nothing like Dylan O’Brien! I’m a girl with long hair! How idiotic can
you get?” I yell back at the imbecile. “Damn it Marty! I can’t believe you did
this again! You told me this was the right guy!” said a new voice from the
front of the vehicle. Next thing I know someone presses a cloth to my mouth and
the world goes dark.
I’m jostled awake some time later, and
suddenly I’m thrown out of the moving van. I go air born for a second and then
my fall is cushioned by grass. “Yeah that’s right! Drive away you pieces of
crap!” I yell after the van that I hear tearing away from where ever they
dropped me. I’m still bound and blind folded and I can hear kids playing in the
background so I’m guessing they dropped me off at a park. At least they didn’t
drop me off in the ghetto. Well this is awkward, I have to find a way to untie
myself. “Excuse me! Can someone please untie me?” I yell loud enough for the
people to hear. Next thing I know I hear a bunch of soccer moms screaming and
running away while grabbing their children. “I hope your implants fall out!” I
scream toward those assholes. “Can I help you?” I hear a bubbly female voice
say from behind me. “Yes actually, if you could untie me that would be
awesome.” I say to the girl. After she unties me I take off the blindfold and
look down at a short girl with blond hair and big green eyes. She looks nice
enough. “Hi my name is Annie!” she chirps at me. “Hey, my name is Charlie.
Thanks for untying me!” I say gratefully. “So umm, what just happened? Why were
you blind folded?” she asks me. “It’s a long story…” I sigh.
Annie takes me to coffee and tells me
those jerk-offs tossed me in Seattle, Washington. “That is so rude! They
could’ve at least dropped me off in California! People these days…” I exclaim
after hearing what state I’m in. “That is pretty rude. I still can’t believe
they thought you were Dylan O’Brien. You look nothing alike!” she says agreeing
with my earlier thoughts. “How am I going to get home? They took my money, all
twenty dollars of it.” I say wistfully, thinking about all the coffee I could
have bought with that money. Hey, college is expensive. “Well you could work at
the magazine with me! It would be so much fun!” she says smiling. “That would
be perfect!” I say smiling back at the small girl who saved me from the
impending soccer moms. “We should probably get you some clothes though,” she says
eyeing my shirt. “And I should probably call my mom…” I say while shuddering at
the thought of her freaking out.
Six months later…
As
I stare down at my article in the new magazine I work for I realize two things.
Seattle has really good coffee, and being kidnapped makes for a great story.
After my mom finally sent over all of my stuff I started working at the
magazine with Annie, and she suggested that my first piece be about my
kidnapping. It’s kind of embarrassing writing about how I was mistaken for a
guy though. Next time someone asks me to chase after their runaway cat I’m
going to have to pass.
Sunday, September 21, 2014
Bede and Canterbury Notes
Bede (pp.74-82) & the Prologue to Canterbury Tales (pp.90-115) Collaboration Notes
Pages 74-82 Taylor
From A History of the English Church and People:
- most people were illiterate so Bede got documents through the monastery
- Britain and Ireland: Britain is an island off the coast of Germany
- land is good for grain and timber
- good pasturage for cattle/draft animals
- alot of fish
- pearls and scarlet dye extracted from shellfish
- land has many metals: copper, iron, lead, silver
- has a lot of coal
- 28 noble cities: five languages and four nations (English, British, Scots, Picts)
- Britons were first to colonize, a common language is latin
- Scots settled ireland and Picts showed up and asked permission to join their island
- Scots refused so Picts settled on Britain, Picts took Scottish wives so the king comes from the female royal line
- Scots migrated to Britain under chieftain Reuda they are called Dalreudians
From the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle:
- The Vikings split up in East Anglia and Northumbria
- vikings defeated many earls/lords of the British king in Sussex, Kent, Essex etc.
- King Alfred ordered new longships to be built against the ash-ships
- The english engaged in a naval battle with the danes
- The danes made king edward break the peace by taking a woman
- they got into a huge fight and a lot of people with weird names died
- they negotiated peace with northumbria and the anglians
Pages 90-98-michael
- Bio
- · Written by Geoffrey Chaucer(circa 1343-1400)
- · No one knows what inspired Canterbury Tales, the tale embodies medieval literature such as romance and comedy.
- A Closer look
- · The story tells of a pilgrimage of all people both rich and poor together, and starts with a prologue.
- · There are 24 different tales through the eyes of different people on the voyage.
- · Captures the essence of the time, shows all parts of medieval society.
- Prologue
- · Canterbury is a town outside London where a cathedral stands that is the place where Archbishop Thomas a Becket was murdered in 1170
- · The pilgrimage began in April 1387, at an inn on the way the narrator meets a group of people who are all going on the pilgrimage and he joins their fellowship.
- · Among the company was, a Knight was told of many heroic tales and battles he had been through.
- · With him was his son and squire, some 20 years of age. He is described as being fresh and yet experienced and knew what he was doing.
- · There was also a Yeoman( Attendant) for the knight and squire, “he was properly Forester I guess”
- A nun, Known as Madam Eglantyne. She was pleasant and friendly in her ways; her way of smiling was very simple and coy.
Pages 99-107 Hikaru
- the monk has a great horse, and is a hunter
- the friar is benevolent, a beggar
- the merchant is known for his money handling skills, but is in debt
- there is a clerk who likes philosophy books, spends his money on them
- the Sergeant of Law was well respected and erudite
- several craftsmen as part of a guild - Haberdasher as hatmaker, weaver, carpenter, tapestry maker
- a shipman who knew the seas from Tunisia to Sweden, a great seaman
- a doctor who was excellent in curing people, saved his money
Pages 108-115 Annie
the plowman was an honest worker, was a good man living by the gospel (Ten Commandments)
the miller was a big man, very strong and hearty. He played bagpipes and stole grain. He was a brawny looking dude.
The manciple was illiterate but very good with money.
The reeve was old and thin. He played his bussiness by the books with taxes and such. He had his rich treasure stored away. He and from Norfolk.
The summoner resembled a cherub. He had bad boils on his face. He was mean looking and scared children. He resembled an ogre. Some thought he was insane.
The pardoner rode with the summoner. He had waxy, yellow, rat tail hair with no hood. With bulging eyeballs. Small voice. a man of God with many relics.
This is the story of the ranks of an aseembled company in southwark at the high class hostelry know as the tabard.
They were all drinking. A manly man came. the man proposes that they all tell two stories on the way to Canterbury Nd two stories back, the winner gets dinner at the tavern paid by all. The man will go with them and be the judge. They all started off on the journey.
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Masterpiece 1
The Psychology of American Serial Killers:
·
Bloody Benders:
family who killed guests at their inn in Labette County, Kansas in 1872
·
David Berkowitz: also
known as "Son of Sam"; convicted of killing 6 people in New York City
in 1976-1977
·
Kenneth Bianchi and Angelo Buono, Jr.: also
known as "The Hillside
Strangler"; killers of 12 women and possibly involved in
three other killings
·
William Bonin: also
known as "The Freeway Killer"; with several accomplices, claimed the
lives of 20 boys in California
·
Richard Angelo: Also
known as "The Angel of Death". New York nurse convicted of 4 murders,
linked to 6 other deaths. Suspected of killing up to 25 people.
·
Ted Bundy: law
student who raped and murdered more than 35 women in six states; escaped from
prison twice before being executed in 1989
·
Ricardo Caputo: also
known as "The Lady Killer"; strangled 4 women across North America in
the 1970s becoming one of the FBI 10 Most Wanted
·
David Carpenter: also
known as "The Trailside Killer"; murdered 5 women on San
Francisco-area hiking trails between 1979 and 1981
·
Richard Chase: also
known as "The Vampire of Sacramento"; murdered 6 people in California
in the 1970s
·
Joseph
Christopher: Also known as "The Midtown Slasher"; racist
who killed 12 people, all but one of them African Americans, in 1980 and 1981,
between upstate New York and Georgia, mutilating 2 of them.
·
John Norman Collins: also
known as "The Co-Ed Killer"; Murdered 3 women and 3 young girls, beat
his own sister very badly, had an obsession with mutilation and excessive gore.
Dean Corll and Elmer Wayne Henley: Along with David Owen Brooks, committed the Houston
Mass Murders in the 1970s; abducted, raped, tortured and murdered 5 men and 25
young boys
·
Juan Corona:
California killer convicted of murdering 25 men in 1971
Wisconsin cannibal who
kept heads, skulls and body parts in his apartment for sexual gratification;
murdered 4 men and 13 young boys. Dahmer was a known sex offender, he sexually
abused and violated a young boy.
Thomas Dillon: Serial sniper who killed 5 men in southeastern Ohio
between 1989 and
·
Walter E. Ellis: also
known as "The Milwaukee North Side Strangler"; convicted of killing 7
prostitutes in Wisconsin between 1986 and 2007.
·
Albert Fish: also
known as "The Werewolf of Wisteria"; sadist and pedophile who
cannibalized several children; convicted of one murder, confessed to 2 others,
claimed to have molested 100 children
Joseph Paul Franklin: racist serial killer who targeted interracial
couples and attempted to assassinate Larry Flynt and Vernon Jordan; convicted of 11 murders and confessed to nine
others; executed in 2013
·
John Wayne Gacy: also
known as "The Killer Clown"; killer of at least 33 men and boys; kept
bodies buried under his Chicago home;
executed in 1994.
·
Ed Gein: From
La Crosse, Wisconsin; Ed Gein committed
his crimes in Plainfield, Wisconsin ;
two known victims, one suspected victim, four missing persons; elements of
Gein's life and crimes have inspired, at least in part, the films Psycho and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, and
the novel/movie The Silence of the Lambs
·
Harpe Brothers: also
known as "Bloody Harpes"; Micajah "Big" Harpe (1768? –
August 1799) and Wiley "Little" Harpe (1770? – January 1804),
America's first known serial killers were credited with the murders of 40 men,
women, and children.
·
Keith Hunter
Jesperson: also known as "The Happy Face Killer"; killed
8 women between 1990 and 1995
·
Patrick Kearney: necrophiliac convicted
of 21 murders in California and admitted to seven other murders
Delphine
LaLaurie: Tortured and maimed her
slaves
·
Bobbie Joe Long: also
known as "The Classified Ad Rapist"; killed 10 women in Tampa Bay,
Florida in 1984
·
Dennis Rader: also
known as "The BTK Killer"; killed ten people between 1974 and 1991
in Sedgwick County,
Kansas
·
Richard Ramirez: also
known as "The Night Stalker"; terrorized Los Angeles in 1984 and
1985; convicted of 14 murders; died in prison 7 June 2013
·
Gary Ridgway: also
known as "The Green River Killer"; convicted of murdering 49 women in
Washington state
·
Heriberto Seda: New York City copycat
killer of the "Zodiac Killer"
active from 1990 to 1993; convicted of shooting eight individuals, killing
three; sentenced to life imprisonment in 1998
·
Edward Spreitzer: also
known as "The Chicago Rippers"; as part of a satanic cult, raped and
mutilated at least four women and also killed a man in Chicago
·
Axeman of New
Orleans: killer of at least eight people in the New Orleans area
from May 1918 to October 1919
·
Boston Strangler: 1960s
deaths of 13 women (five young, eight older), mostly with their own stockings
as ligature. Albert DeSalvo confessed
to the murders, but was never indicted; DNA evidence has recently suggested his
guilt in one of the cases
Charles Manson- Cult leader who influenced his followers "The Family" to carry out murders of Hollywood's elite. Spawned the book and song Helter Skelter.
Gary Gilmore- Shot two men in cold blood during robberies. Executed by a firing squad in Utah.
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