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Tuesday 8 March 2022

International women's day

 Hellooo.....Readers,

Happy International women's day to all.....

Today 8th March, this day we celebrate as international women's day.Now I'm working at Ssccm, Bhavnagar.That is the frist thing which gives me a kind of happiness. Another thing is that today I played the role of Anchor in the programme Jooi Melo.

Jooi-Melo is started by Usha Upadhyay ma'am before 4 years. This year it enters in 5th years She started this Jooi - Melo,so women can express their feelings and emotions. They all can write and expresse in various way so this kind of  start up give them platform. 


Never underestimate women because what they can do male can never do.

Here some glimpses of Today poetry recitation.In this session poetry recited by Titixa Pandya, Prakruti Bhatt, Kavisha Alagiya,Chavi Rathod and students, Hiral Pandya and Parmar Dhruv.









નારી તું નારાયણી

નારી તું મહાન

નારી તારી ગૌરવ ગાથા ગાયે વેદ પુરાણ 











Thank you....






Sunday 6 March 2022

Since there Is no help

SINCE THERE IS NO HELP

  BY MICHAEL DRAYTON

Since there’s no help, come let us kiss and part.

Nay, I have done, you get no more of me;

And I am glad, yea glad with all my heart,

That thus so cleanly I myself can free.

Shake hands for ever, cancel all our vows,

And when we meet at any time again,

Be it not seen in either of our brows

That we one jot of former love retain.

Now at the last gasp of Love’s latest breath,

When, his pulse failing, Passion speechless lies;

When Faith is kneeling by his bed of death,

And Innocence is closing up his eyes—

Now, if thou wouldst, when all have given him over,

From death to life thou might’st him yet recover!


As the opening line and valedictory tone suggest, ‘Since there’s no help’ comes towards the end of the cycle known as Idea’s Mirror, by which point Drayton has lost hope of ever winning his lady. This is clear from the argument in the sonnet, which we might summarise or paraphrase as follows: ‘It’s no good, so let’s split up. I’m glad, actually – no, really, I am – to be out of this relationship. Let’s shake hands and forget everything we once promised each other; and when we meet in the future, let’s agree not to show the other any sign that we still love one another. Now, as our love for each other dies for ever, as we realise that we cannot entertain any further hope that we can make this work – now, if you wanted to, you could reawaken my dying love for you, and bring it back to life.’


In other words, then, ‘Since there’s no help’ is a break-up poem that ends, in the final couplet, with a sudden turn – indeed, not just a turn (a common feature of the sonnet) but a turnaround, whereby Drayton effectively says that all of this could be reversed if the lover wished. But this shift has also begun with that ‘Now’ which begins the ninth line, ushering in the sestet or final six lines. And it is marked by the change from imperative mood (‘Shake hands’, ‘cancel’, ‘Be it not’) to the subjunctive (‘thou wouldst’, ‘thou might’st’).


This is what marks out Drayton’s sonnet as a memorable and striking poem: the way the poet goes from brash confidence that he is happy to be leaving the relationship behind to essentially saying, ‘Look, say the word and I’ll be back with you like a shot.’ One wonders if A. E. Housman had this poem in mind when he penned his ‘Shake hands’ poem about his hopeless love, for Moses Jackson.


But the other thing which makes ‘Since there’s no help’ such a memorable expression of hopeless love is the directness of the language: it’s bluff, virile, and to the point. This makes the poem easy to understand, but also makes the undermining of the poet’s over-confidence in the latter section of the sonnet all the more affecting.


Michael Drayton “Since there's no help, come let us kiss and part”

The sonnet “Since there's no help, come let us kiss and part”, written by Michael Drayton, consists of fourteen lines, which is typical for the form of a sonnet. Moreover this sonnet has three quatrains and one final couplet, which is the form of a Shakespearean sonnet (abab cdcd efef gg).

The three quatrains all have full rhymes at the end of the line. The couplet consists of an eye rhyme (over – recover). The rhyme scheme itself is an alternating one, which is due to the fact that it is (abab) instead of (abba).

The three quatrains all have ten syllables each, except for the couplet in the end which has first twelve and in the second line eleven syllables. That is a factor for the importance of the couplet in the Shakespearean sonnet forms, to which I'll come back later.

The metre in this sonnet is “unstressed - stressed”, which makes it an iamb, and because it has ten syllables it makes it an iambic pentameter, which means that there are five iambs in each line, except for the final couplet.

From line seven to line eight, right in the sonnet's middle, lies the only enjambment of the sonnet, which means that there is no full stop, semicolon or comma at the line's end and the meaning of the line is carried into the following one. That could implicate that the middle of the sonnet is as important as the final couplet in the end.

Michael Drayton also frequently uses the same words in the beginning of the lines. Only five of the fourteen lines have a word in the beginning that has not been used before or after. His repetitions include conjunctions (and, that) as well as an adverb (now).

There is also one anaphora in the sonnet in lines ten to eleven, which both start with the adverb “when”.

In lines nine to twelve he personalises love, passion, faith and innocence and gives them attributes of human beings, in order to make these words more important in his sonnet. This is a mixture of animism and anthropomorphism.

Due to the use of the pronouns “I”, “we” and “us” it is clear to say that it is a first person speaker in this sonnet, who talks about him- or herself. The addressee of the sonnet is his love interest, because he addresses to “you”.

The mood and the tone of the sonnet can only be described as sad, melancholic and pitiful with a little shimmer of hope. In the beginning the speaker of the sonnet and his love separate even though their relationship could have last longer than the point pointed out in the sonnet. It is hard for the speaker to break up with his love, but they somehow seem to have to break up, due to unknown reasons.

In my opinion Michael Drayton's sonnet is, concerning the content, structured in two parts. The first part tells the story of a bitter sweet breakup of the speaker and his love. It seems to be a very hopeless relationship without a future, which can be seen right in the beginning of the sonnet, which is the sonnet's title as well, (“Since there's no help, come let us kiss and part”) and line two (“You get no more of me”). The little shimmer of hope I mentioned before can be found in line three (“And I am glad, yea glad with all my heart”). Line four gives the reader the reason why he is glad (“That thus so cleanly I myself can free”), which is another factor for the bitter sweet and mixed feelings going around in the speaker's head.

In line five it seems that the speaker of the sonnet is finally ready to leave his love once and for all (“Shake hands for ever, cancel all our vows), which stand as a symbol for saying goodbye to someone. The last handshake with a person and the cancelling of vows, which could stand for the cancelling of a maybe planned wedding or the vow within the wedding that the lovers go through joy and sorrow till death does them part, are further signs for a goodbye.

All of a sudden, right after the speaker was ready to leave his love, the sonnet gives the reader another piece of hope. The speaker points out the possibility of meeting his love again (“And when we meet at any time again”). That is another recognisable factor of their love, because he won't give up the hope of meeting his love again.

Right afterwards comes the enjambment in this sonnet (“Be it not seen in either of our brows that we one jot of former love retain.”). In my opinion it is a conclusion to the first six lines of this sonnet. It says that if the lovers ever meet again, they pretend not to love each other. This could be a sign for a possible danger that occurs when the two lovers are together. It seems like something frightens the speaker not to openly show feelings for his true love and in order to, maybe, protect her or both they suppress their feelings for each other and go on with their lives alone.

The second part of the sonnet (line nine to fourteen) is a very hopeful one, even though it's wording may seem not hopeful.

It starts in line nine with the moment of death of a personified Love (“Now at the last gasp of Love's latest breath”). In my opinion the speaker refers to the relationship between him and his love interest. The fact that they have to separate somehow kills their love. The description of their Love's death goes on in line ten (“When, his (Love's) pulse failing, Passion speechless lies”). This is a simple trinity brought up by the speaker. It could mean that when Love is dying all the passion the former lovers felt for each other is gone, but it could also mean that without love, there is no true passion and so the “lovers” lie to each other through their passion. A third possibility could be that the passion is seen as an act of sexuality between two lovers and that this act has come to a final end. Not only through the separation but possibly due to some corporal disorders.

The next line (“When Faith is kneeling by his bed of death”) stands as a metaphor for a fading believe or faith when there is no love. If someone does not love, he has nothing to believe in. In my opinion believing in somebody or something means loving something or something in a certain way.

The speaker ends his portrayal of a dying Love in line twelve (“And Innocence is closing up his eyes”). That could mean on the one hand that Love has finally died and the two lovers are forever separated, or on the other hand that Innocence closed dying Love's eyes and gave him final peace and a last warmth through the touch.

In the final couplet the speaker addresses to his love again (“Now if thou would'st, when all have given him over, From death to life thou might'st him yet recover!”). The speaker gives his love a last shimmer of hope by saying that his love alone can resurrect their dying or already dead feelings for each other.

As I said in the beginning of this paragraph the text is rather positive, even though the wording has a darker sense. In my opinion the speaker does give examples for what happens after the separation and the meeting again. When both are forced not to show any feelings for each other it would be the inevitable death of their love. But in the end he says that the only one who could ever revive their love is his love interest. He takes away his own power to revive their love and puts it into the hands of his love. For me that is a clear sign of true love again, because he somehow waits for his love to come back to him. He tells his love subliminally that he will wait for her what ever happens and so he makes, while separating from her, the first step to come close to her again.

I think at first sight “Since there's no help, come let us kiss and part” is structured like every other sonnet, which has the Shakespearean form. But if you look closer into the sonnet's structure you will realise, like I did, that it has two parts within it's form. The first part of the Sonnet is about two lovers who separate from each other. This situation is followed by the enjambment, which acts like a couplet to first half of the sonnet. The second part of the sonnet is mostly about the speaker giving examples and ensuring his love give their love at a later time a second chance. So if I compare Michael Drayton's sonnet to a standardised Shakespearean sonnet it comes out to be a special one. Other sonnets are written to seduce a loved one. This one is not far away from that, because in the end the speaker somehow seduces his love to be with him again. The special thing about this sonnet is the beginning. It is very uncommon in seductive poetry to break up with your love only to re-seduce her. I think that is the point that makes Michael Drayton's “Since there's no help, come let us kiss and part” so special.






Find no peace

 Hellooo readers....

   Here Im going to discuss about poem named Find no pease by Thomas Wyatt.


Find no peace

SIR THOMAS WYATT

I find no peace, and all my war is done.

I fear and hope. I burn and freeze like ice.

I fly above the wind, yet can I not arise;

And nought I have, and all the world I seize on.

That loseth nor locketh holdeth me in prison

And holdeth me not—yet can I scape no wise—

Nor letteth me live nor die at my device,

And yet of death it giveth me occasion.

Without eyen I see, and without tongue I plain.

I desire to perish, and yet I ask health.

I love another, and thus I hate myself.

I feed me in sorrow and laugh in all my pain;

Likewise displeaseth me both life and death,

And my delight is causer of this strife.



Summary


The poet opened the poem with the conclusion in his mind saying that since he couldn't find no peace, he would give up his fighting. Line 2-7 further explains the poet's or the poem speaker's state of dilemma which precedes the poet's conclusion: "I fear and hope, I burn and freeze like ice; I fly above the wind, yet can I not rise, And naught I have and all the world I seize on; That looseth nor locket holdeth me in prison, And holdeth, me not yet can I scape nowise; Nor letteth me live nor die at my devise" The cause of the poet's frustration was shown in line 14 "And my delight is causer of this strife" meaning that his pains and sorrows were self-inflected due to his desire for love "I love another, and thus I hate myself"; the hatred was so strong to the point where he was displeased with living but didn't prefer dying as an alternative. 


 The poem has the theme of love, dilemma, unfulfilled emotion, vanity of possession when love is shattered, etc. As said at the beginning of this post, love is very paramount in the poem; where the poet expressed a certain love experience which led him to an unfulfilled emotional state, leaving him in a state of dilemma. Everything the poet acquired were worth nothing since he couldn't hold unto the love he desired. The poem is a sonnet with end rhyme pattern of ABBAABBACDDCEE. It looks anti-climatic and has the old form of English language. 


The repetition of first person singular "I" made the poem more personal. Most lines of the poem are antithesis. Silmile in line 2 "freeze like ice", hyperbole in line 3 and 4 "I fly above the wind" "all the world Iseize on" alliteration in lines 5, 7, 13 "That looseth nor locket" "Nor letteth me live nor die at my devise" "Likewise displeaseth me both death" personification in line 14 "And my delight is causer of this strife" Assonance in lines 2, 3, 7, 9, "like ice" "fly above the wind, yet can I not rise" "die at my devise" "eye I see" According to wikipedia.org article, "Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503 – 11 October 1542) was a 16th-century English ambassador and lyrical poet. 


He is credited with introducing the sonnet into English literature. He was born at Allington Castle, near Maidstone in Kent."









 Hello readers, Welcome to the world of thoughts...☺️         After many times I'm going to write a blog.I think I'm little bit stil...