Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
The Tempest
A post in progress...
In William Hogarth's Scene from The Tempest, Ariel is an angel musician (below, left, on top of the rock), while Caliban (below, right) is a poor being, deformed, sentenced to hard labour.
Prospero, former duke of Milan, has been living on a desert island in the Mediterranean with his daughter Miranda since the day his brother Antonio usurped and exiled him.
Prospero is a wizard and he uses magic to provoke a tempest and the apparent sinking of Antonio's accomplice ship, king Alonso, on their way back to Naples from Tunis.
Antonio, the king and his son Ferdinand, his court and the mariners are thrown on different points of the island.
Each character is convinced that the others died, while the king's ship is "safely in harbour".
On Prospero's arrival the island was inhabited by Caliban, the son of the witch Sycorax, and by a magical being, Ariel.
Prospero makes the half-human Caliban his slave and Ariel his magical helper.
Trinculo, a jester at king Alonso's court, on first seeing Caliban says:
What have we here? a man or a fish? dead or alive? A fish: he smells like a fish; a very ancient fish- like smell; a kind of not the newest Poor- John. A strange fish!
But soon he realizes the "fish" is:
Legged like a man and his fins like arms! Warm o’ my troth! I do now let loose my opinion; hold it no longer: this is no fish, but an islander, that hath lately suffered by a thunderbolt.
The spirit Ariel is invisible to common people, though they can hear his music.
He helps Prospero in taking his - bloodless - revenge against his usurpers and getting his dukedom back.
He is painted as a nymph (below).
Each character is convinced that the others died, while the king's ship is "safely in harbour".
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Free icons for non-commercial use from: http://sweetclipart.com/ and http://www.clker.com/ |
On Prospero's arrival the island was inhabited by Caliban, the son of the witch Sycorax, and by a magical being, Ariel.
Prospero makes the half-human Caliban his slave and Ariel his magical helper.
Trinculo, a jester at king Alonso's court, on first seeing Caliban says:
What have we here? a man or a fish? dead or alive? A fish: he smells like a fish; a very ancient fish- like smell; a kind of not the newest Poor- John. A strange fish!
But soon he realizes the "fish" is:
Legged like a man and his fins like arms! Warm o’ my troth! I do now let loose my opinion; hold it no longer: this is no fish, but an islander, that hath lately suffered by a thunderbolt.
The spirit Ariel is invisible to common people, though they can hear his music.
He helps Prospero in taking his - bloodless - revenge against his usurpers and getting his dukedom back.
He is painted as a nymph (below).
William Hamilton, Prospero and Ariel, 1797
Or as a spirit with a somewhat animal face, like in Fuseli's painting (below). "On the bat's back I do fly".
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![]() |
Henry Fuseli, Ariel, 1800-1810 |
In William Hogarth's Scene from The Tempest, Ariel is an angel musician (below, left, on top of the rock), while Caliban (below, right) is a poor being, deformed, sentenced to hard labour.
![]() |
William Hogarth, The Tempest, 1728. |
It is Ariel's hypnotic music that guides the young prince and the other shipreck, in small groups, from different points of the island, towards Prospero's cave.
While Ferdinando is following the path traced by Ariel's music, he meets Miranda.
She is astonished at the sight of the young man: the only human being she has ever known is her father and she wonders if Ferdinando is of their same species.
The two young ones fall in love at first sight.
Before giving his consent to their wedding, Prospero tries Ferdinando charging him with hard work, that the young man dutifully carries on.
Labels:
The Tempest
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William Shakespeare
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work in progress
Sunday, December 22, 2013
Happy Christmas and Happy New Year!
An English Christmas song to wish you a Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, Happy Winter Holidays!
Besides the interpretation by the Muppets, the song is just as it sounds, featuring a "true love" presenting his/ her beloved one with an increasing number of weird gifts: a partridge, two turtle doves, three French hens, four calling birds, five golden rings, six geese a-laying, seven swans a-swimming, eight maids a-milking, nine ladies dancing, ten lords a-leaping, eleven pipers piping, twelve drummers drumming (the lyrics is here).
I guess these gifts are not your favourites and the whole text may appear surreal, so let's try to make sense of this 250-years-old song and see its connection with Christmas.
A religious interpretation of the symbolical meaning of the gifts can be read in The Voice, a website collecting biblical and theological resources. The article gives a general account on the "twelve days" of Christmas, from the 25th of December to the 5th of January. The cycle closes with the 6th of January, which in many cultures (in Italy, for example) is the day in which gifts are given, especially to the chidren. Then it analyses the twelve figures: the partridge is an image of Jesus Christ, the two turtle doves stand for the Old and the New Testament, etc.

Christmas is a celebration of new life. It falls in the days immediately after the winter solstice - in our hemisphere 21st December, with the shortest day and longest night - daytime becoming longer and longer from that date on. It is interesting to know more about other winter festivities with the same character - celebrating the light and new life, feasting, giving gifts, having fun - held in the same period in other places and times on this page of the BBC.
Labels:
12 Days of Christmas
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carols
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Christmas
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religious symbolism
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winter solstice
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word games
Sunday, December 08, 2013
Beowullf
The LEGO Beowulf video you are going to watch is a fast and fun summary of the epic poem... and yes, all the stuff is made up of colourful LEGO bricks.
Part one
6th century - The young hero Beowulf comes from Scandinavia to help the Dane king Hrothgar against the attacks of the monster Grendel. Beowulf kills him.
"Then from the moorland, by misty crags, with God’s wrath laden, Grendel came"
"... no keenest blade, no farest of falchions fashioned on earth, could harm or hurt that hideous fiend!"
"To Beowulf now the glory was given..."
Part two
"Grendel's mother... the death of her son to avenge"
comes to the hall. Beowulf kills her.
Part three
Fifty years later, Beowulf is king, "old and gray".
He defeats a dragon, but
Fifty years later, Beowulf is king, "old and gray".
He defeats a dragon, but
"The wound began,
which that dragon-of-earth had erst inflicted,
to swell and smart; and soon he found
in his breast was boiling, baleful and deep,
pain of poison"
Labels:
Beowulf
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Dragon
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epic poem
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Grendel
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Grendel's Mother
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LEGO bricks
Monday, November 25, 2013
Celtic Britain
learning unit about the Celts.
Click on the link and start the activities.
Friday, October 11, 2013
21st-Century Creature
Bionics is the branch of scientific research based on the use of "models of living sytems... in order to find new ideas for useful artificial machines" (definition from the Encyclopaedia Britannica online).
An article in today's Excite News refers about a "man" walking and breathing with artificial parts. Actually, the "man" is a robot made up of sophisticated pieces of technology, with a face modelled after a real living person and dressed up with clothes form Harrods, London.
It's interesting to learn about the reaction of the creators at their first sight of their Creature.
"How can I describe my emotions at this catastrophe, or how delineate the wretch whom with such infinite pains and care I had endeavoured to form? His limbs were in proportion, and I had selected his features as beautiful. Beautiful! Great God! His yellow skin scarcely covered the work of muscles and arteries beneath; his hair was of a lustrous black, and flowing; his teeth of a pearly whiteness; but these luxuriances only formed a more horrid contrast with his watery eyes, that seemed almost of the same colour as the dun-white sockets in which they were set, his shrivelled complexion and straight black lips." (Dr. Frankenstein).
"I thought it was rather revolting to be honest," he says. "It was quite a shock to see a face that closely resembles what I see in the mirror every morning on this kind of dystopian looking machine." (Bertolt Meyer).
Ugliness is not the only motive for these reactions. Can you imagine any other?
An article in today's Excite News refers about a "man" walking and breathing with artificial parts. Actually, the "man" is a robot made up of sophisticated pieces of technology, with a face modelled after a real living person and dressed up with clothes form Harrods, London.
It's interesting to learn about the reaction of the creators at their first sight of their Creature.
"How can I describe my emotions at this catastrophe, or how delineate the wretch whom with such infinite pains and care I had endeavoured to form? His limbs were in proportion, and I had selected his features as beautiful. Beautiful! Great God! His yellow skin scarcely covered the work of muscles and arteries beneath; his hair was of a lustrous black, and flowing; his teeth of a pearly whiteness; but these luxuriances only formed a more horrid contrast with his watery eyes, that seemed almost of the same colour as the dun-white sockets in which they were set, his shrivelled complexion and straight black lips." (Dr. Frankenstein).
"I thought it was rather revolting to be honest," he says. "It was quite a shock to see a face that closely resembles what I see in the mirror every morning on this kind of dystopian looking machine." (Bertolt Meyer).
Ugliness is not the only motive for these reactions. Can you imagine any other?
Labels:
bionic man
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bionics
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robots
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Punctuation matters!
The 24th of September in the USA every year they celebrate punctuation. Can't believe that? Then visit the site National Punctuation Day.
There's even a contest on "how punctuaction changed my life"...
Well, seriously, the contest is on "how National Punctuation Day® has affected the way you think about punctuation (or not), and how the holiday has affected your writing (or not)."... that's much the same as changing your life, since the right punctuation can save lives :)
"Let's eat grandma" or "Let's eat, grandma": guess which one the wolf in the story of Little Red Riding Hood would find appropriate.
There's even a contest on "how punctuaction changed my life"...
Well, seriously, the contest is on "how National Punctuation Day® has affected the way you think about punctuation (or not), and how the holiday has affected your writing (or not)."... that's much the same as changing your life, since the right punctuation can save lives :)
"Let's eat grandma" or "Let's eat, grandma": guess which one the wolf in the story of Little Red Riding Hood would find appropriate.
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