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Discovering Literature of the English Speaking World

5 décembre 2012

The myth of Prometheus The story of Prometheus is

The myth of Prometheus

 

 

The story of Prometheus is a part of the Greek mythology, and explains how human civilization developed. It also represents why the Olypian Gods are not to be disobeyed under any circumstances.

Prometheus was a Titan : a race of huge, incredibly powerful deities who were overthrown by the Olympians after a brutal war. But Prometheus was clever, as his name suggests (Prometheus literally means "the one who thinks before"), as opposed to his brother Epimetheus ("the one who thinks after"). He is known for one particular trick he played on Zeus which happened to set in motion an important chain of events.

One day, during a sacrificial meal meant to settle things between the mortals and the immortals, Prometheus placed two offerings in front of Zeus and suggested that the God choose which one he wanted, and the humans would keep the other. The first offering was delicious beef meat hidden inside a filthy ox stomach. The other one consisted of bones wrapped up in sparkling fat. Zeus chose the latter, as it seemed to obviously be the better one. It was burnt to be sent to Olympus (that was the way offerings reached the SKies). Of course, he ended up with mere bones, while the humans kept the meat for themselves.

Furious, the God of Gods took away fire from mankind as punishment. Prometheus, feeling responsible for what had happened, took it upon himself to bring back fire to mankind. He managed to steal a tiny bit of Hephaestus' fire, the very one used by the blacksmith God. Prometheus managed to transmit it to humanity, giving them access to fire once again.

However, this only increased Zeus' anger. As soon as he found out about the deed, he had Prometheus banished to Tartarus, the part of the mythologic underworld which corresponds to the christian Hell. He was chained to the underground part of the Caucasus, a mountain thought to be one of the world's pillars. Bound to it for eternity, an eagle comes each and every day to eat his liver, only for said liver to grow back and get devoured again the following morning. It should also be noted that directly because of this, the still angry Zeus sent Pandora, the first woman, on Earth.

Over the centuries, Prometheus came to symbolize the nobility of going beyond the forbidden, but also the consequences of such an act ; which is why Mary Shelley drew a parallel between Viktor Frankenstein and Prometheus.

Adrien Pothier -1L

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10 octobre 2012

MARY SHELLEY Biography: Mary Wollstonecraft

MARY SHELLEY

                       

Biography:

Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin was born on August 30, 1797, in Somers Town, London, England. She was the only daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft, an early feminist (one who works on behalf of women's rights) an author of “A Vindication of the Rights of Woman”, and William Godwin, the political writer, essayist and novelist. Both of them objected to the institution of marriage. Ten days after Mary's birth, Wollstonecraft died from complications, leaving Godwin, a self-absorbed intellectual, to take care of both Mary and Fanny Imlay, Wollstonecraft's daughter from an earlier relationship.

Mary's home life improved little, when four years later her father married his next-door neighbour, Mary Jane Clairmont, who already had two children. Godwin provided his daughter with a rich, if informal, education, encouraging her to adhere to his liberal political theories.  The new Mrs Godwin favoured her own children over the daughters of the well-known Wollstonecraft, and Mary was often left alone and unhappy. She was not formally educated, but she read many of her mother's books, and absorbed the intellectual atmosphere created by her father and such visitors as the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834). Young Mary's favourite retreat was Wollstonecraft's grave in the St. Pancras churchyard, where she went to read and write, and eventually, to meet her lover, Percy Shelley (1792–1822). It is in 1814 that Mary Godwin began a romantic relationship with one of her father’s political followers, the married Percy Bysshe Shelley.

As an admirer of Godwin, Percy Shelley visited the author's home and briefly met Mary when she was fourteen, but their attraction did not take hold until a meeting two years later. Shelley was twenty-two and married; his wife was expecting their second child, but he and Mary, like Godwin and Wollstonecraft, believed that ties of the heart were more important than legal ones. In July 1814, one month before her seventeenth birthday, Mary ran away with Percy, and Mary's stepsister, Claire Clairmont, but leaving Percy's pregnant wife behind. They left for France and travelled through Europe. Percy's father, Sir Timothy Shelley, cut off his son's large allowance after the couple ran away together.  In 1816, the couple famously spent a summer with Lord ByronJohn William Polidori, and Claire Clairmont near Geneva, Switzerland, where Mary conceived the idea for her novel Frankenstein. The Shelleys left Britain in 1818 for Italy, where their second and third children died before Mary Shelley gave birth to her last and only surviving child, Percy Florence. Upon their return to England, Mary was pregnant with Percy's child.  In 1816 Mary's half-sister Fanny committed suicide; weeks later, Percy's wife, Harriet, drowned herself. Mary and Percy got married in London in an unsuccessful attempt to gain custody of his two children by Harriet. Three of their own children died soon after birth, and Mary fell into a deep nervous breakdown that did not improve even after the birth in 1819 of Percy Florence, her only surviving child. The Shelleys' marriage suffered, too, in the wake of their children's deaths, and Percy developed romantic attachments to other women.

Despite these difficult circumstances, Mary and Percy enjoyed a large group of friends, which included the poet Lord Byron (1788–1824) and the writer Leigh Hunt (1784–1859). They also maintained a schedule of very strict study—including classical and European literature, Greek, Latin, and Italian language, music and art—and other writing. During this period Mary completed Frankenstein, the story of a doctor who, while trying to discover the secret of life, steals bodies from graves in an attempt to create life from corpses’ parts—but instead creates a monster.

The Shelleys were settled near Lenci, Italy, in 1822 when Percy Shelley drowned during a storm while sailing to meet Leigh Hunt and his wife. After a year in Italy, Mary returned to England forever with her son.

She died on February the 1st, 1851, at Belgravia, London, of a brain tumour. She rests besides her father, in St Peter’s Graveyard, Bournemouth, South Britain.

 

Frankenstein:

At only 18, she writes the novel Frankenstein or the modern Prometheus, which will inspire the science fiction genre. She revisits the myth of the demiurge through the narrative eye of a scientist which has created a monstrous and inadaptated creature. Among her other works, are the novel Valperga (1823) or The Last Man (1826).

The first edition was published anonymously in London in 1818. Shelley's name appears on the second edition, published in France in 1823.  This work redraws the terrible adventure of Victor Frankenstein (the scientist and not the creature), running away from the horrible creature to which he gave life to. Arrived at the North Pole, he gets acquainted of Captain Walton, and tells him his story. It is thus through his story that the reader relives the fate of a hideous creature, composed of various corpses’ parts. Abandoned and rejected, it is moved by a profound thirst of revenge and multiplies its crimes. Frankenstein already fixes the limits of human science, and the worries that result from it.

Mary Shelley’s work will be adapted many times, among which James Whale’s film (1931).

 

Quotations:

“Love is the only thing that sharing grows”

“Suffering erases up to the most primitives emotions of man”

“Only those who will have felt them, will be able to conceive the seductions of science".

Adélaïde Petit - 1L

 

10 octobre 2012

COLERIDGE

SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE

  

 

              He was born on October 21 , 1772 . Coleridge was the tenth and the last child of his family .His father died in 1782 , after that he went to Christ's Hospital school where he met Robert Southey who became a very good friend . They were very interested in poetry and shared the same dislike for Greek and Latin .

             On  October 4th ,1795, Coleridge married Sara Fricker , the sister of Southey 's wife .After that event , his relationship with Souhey ended .

His first major poem '' The Eolian Harp '' was published in 1796 . Samuel Taylor Coleridge understood  he was ''not fitted for public life '' after the failure of the publication of '' The Watchman '' in May 1796 . Poetry , philosophy and religion were his passions '' In Religious Musings'' (published in 1796) he wrote about the relationship between God and the created world .

             The most influential event in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's career was his relationship with William Worldsworth (1770-1850) .They published a collection of twenty- three poems , in September 1798 . the volume contained his most famous poem '' The Rime of the Ancient Mariner '' . After spending a year in Germany he returned to England where during twelve years he had a miserable life . He started to take laudanum  , a type of opium drug and became an addict . After two years staying in Malta , he separeted from his wife in 1806 and moved to london .

              Shortly after , Coleridge spent his last eigntennth years at Highgate Hospital .There he wrote several works :

                           -Biographia Literaria(1817)

                           -Lay Sermons (1817)

                           -Aids to reflection (1825)

                           -The Constitution of Church and State (1829)

 

Finally Samuel Taylor Coleridge died on July 25 , 1834 at Highgate .

In fact Coleriddge was a major poet of the english Romantic period .

Auriane Sontag - 1L

23 septembre 2012

The rime of the ancient mariner

 

 by Samuel Coleridge

 

An old man is telling his story to another man who is going to be married.

He told him that when he was on his sailing boat with his crew, he had been blocked by an iceberg. After a few moments, an albatross came and then it delivered the boat. Every member of the crew were relieved except the mariner who killed the big bird. After that the wind stopped so the boat couldn’t move anymore. To punish him of having killed one of the creatures of God, the other men forced him to keep a row attached to the bird, around his neck. One by one the member of the crew died. Then the mariner was alone and began to consider that praying was the best solution to be safe so he started to do it and then the wind blew over the sea and the mariner could came back home.

Inès Couturier - L

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