Thursday, 22 September 2022

Chaucer to Elizabeth

   Hello everyone, my name is Mansi Gujadiya.Today i write some question. This question gives by Dilip Barad Sir. This blog is a part of over study.


 Question:-1 Write a brief note on Ban Jonson


               The poet, essayist, and playwright Ben Jonson was born on June 11, 1572 in London, England. His father, a minister, died shortly before his birth and his mother remarried a bricklayer.


                Jonson was raised in Westminster and attended St. Martin’s parish school and Westminster School, where he came under the influence of the classical scholar William Camden. He left the Westminster school in 1589, worked briefly in his stepfather’s trade as a bricklayer, then served in the military at Flanders, before working as an actor and playwright for Philip Henslowe’s theater compan



                  In 1594, Jonson married Anne Lewis and began to work as an actor and playwright. Jonson and Lewis had at least two children, but little else is known of their marriag


                 In 1598, Jonson wrote what is considered his first great play, Every Man in His Humor. In a 1616 production, William Shakespeare acted in one of the lead roles. Shortly after the play opened, Jonson killed Gabriel Spencer in a duel and was tried for murder. He was released by pleading “benefit of clergy” (i.e., by proving he could read and write in Latin, he was allowed to face a more lenient court). He spent only a few weeks in prison, but shortly after his release he was again arrested for failing to pay an acto


               Under King James I, Jonson received royal favor and patronage. Over the next fifteen years many of his most famous satirical plays, including Volpone (1606) and The Alchemist (1610), were produced for the London stage. In 1616, he was granted a substantial pension of one hundred marks a year, and is often identified as England’s first poet laureat


             Jonson’s circle of admirers and friends, who called themselves the “Tribe of Ben,” met regularly at the Mermaid Tavern and later at the Devil’s Head. Among his followers were nobles such as the Duke and Duchess of Newcastle, as well as writers, including Robert Herrick, Richard Lovelace, Sir John Suckling, James Howell, and Thomas Carew. Most of his well-known poems include tributes to friends, notably Shakespeare, John Donne, and Francis Baco


              Ben Jonson died in Westminster on August 8, 1637. A tremendous crowd of mourners attended his burial at Westminster Abbey. He is regarded as one of the major dramatists and poets of the seventeenth century.

Early Life and Education

               Benjamin Jonson was born around June 11, 1572, in Westminster, England, shortly after the death of his father. His father had been a minister who claimed descent from the Scottish gentry, and had been imprisoned and suffered forfeiture under Queen Mary. Two years after his birth, Jonson’s mother married a bricklayer, and Jonson went to school in St Martin’s Lane.


            Despite the fact that the family was poor, Jonson received a good education after a family friend paid for his studies at Westminster school. Following this, Jonson was going to attend the University of Cambridge, but unwillingly had to leave to work with his stepfather as a bricklayer.


Military

               Following his work as a bricklayer, Jonson travelled to the Netherlands and volunteered to soldier with the English regiments of Francis Vere (1560–1609) in Flanders. A story has been told that Jonson fought and killed an enemy soldier in single combat, and took for trophies the weapons of the vanquished soldier.


Acting and Writing Career

                On returning home to England, Jonson turned his hand to playwriting and acting. As an actor, Jonson was the protagonist “Hieronimo” (Geronimo) in the play The Spanish Tragedy (ca. 1586), by Thomas Kyd (1558–94), the first revenge tragedy in English literature.


                 In 1597, he was working playwright employed by Philip Henslowe, the leading producer for the English public theatre, where the production of Every Man in His Humour (1598) established Jonson’s reputation as a dramatist. He had a fixed position in the Admiral’s Men, performing under Henslowe’s management at The Rose.

                Despite being employed as an actor, it is reported that Jonson was not a successful actor, and his talents were much better used as a writer. None of his early tragedies survive, however. An undated comedy, The Case is Altered, may be his earliest surviving play.


              Also in 1597, Henslowe employed Jonson to finish Thomas Nashe’s satire The Isle of Dogs (now lost), but the play was suppressed for alleged seditious content and Jonson was jailed for a short time in Marshalsea Prison and charged with “Leude and mutynous behaviour”. Two of the actors, Gabriel Spenser and Robert Shaw, were also imprisoned.


              A year later, Jonson was again briefly imprisoned, this time in Newgate Prison, for killing Gabriel Spenser in a duel on 22 September 1598 in Hogsden Field. He narrowly escaped the gallows by claiming benefit of clergy (meaning he was shown leniency for proving that he was literate and educated). While he was incarcerated, Jonson converted to Catholicism.


              After being released from prison, Every Man in His Humour (1598) was produced, with William Shakespeare being among the first actors to be cast. Jonson followed this in 1599 with Every Man out of His Humour, a pedantic attempt to imitate Aristophanes.

               Shortly after this, Jonson became embroiled in a public feud with playwrights John Marston and Thomas Dekker when he was wiring for the Children of the Chapel Royal at Blackfriars Theatre in 1600. This became known as the “War of the Theatres”. Cynthia’s Revels, which satirises both Marston and Dekker, was followed by Poetaster (1601). Dekker responded with Satiromastix. Despite this, Jonson later reconciled with with Marston, and collaborated with him and George Chapman in writing Eastward Ho! (1605). However, the play’s anti-Scottish sentiment briefly landed both Jonson and Chapman in jail, and Jonson had further trouble with the English authorities because of his work.


Masques and Royal Patronage

               Following his release from prison and the English reign of James VI and I in 1603, Jonson entered a period of good fortune and productivity. He welcomed the King and James I valued his learning highly, leading to him being asked to write his popular, elegant masques. He also enjoyed the patronage of aristocrats such as Elizabeth Sidney (daughter of Sir Philip Sidney) and Lady Mary Wroth.


             Two of his most well-known masques were written during this time — The Satyr (1603) and The Masque of Blackness (1605). The Masque of Blackness was praised by Algernon Charles Swinburne as the consummate example of this now-extinct genre, which mingled speech, dancing and spectacle. Jonson’s masques were performed at Apethorpe Palace when the King was in residence. Jonson often collaborated with designer Inigo Jones on his masques.


             During this period, Jonson also produced his most successful comedies, beginning in 1606 with Volpone and following with The Silent Woman (1609), The Alchemist (1610), Bartholomew Fayre (1614) and The Devil Is an Ass (1616). The Alchemist and Volpone were immediately successful. Jonson’s remaining tragedies, Sejanus His Fall (1603) and Catiline His Conspiracy (1611), were not well received due to their rigid imitation of classical tragic forms and their pedantic tone. In 1611, Jonson gave up writing plays for the public theatres for a decade, possibly because of his success with masques.

             In 1616, Jonson published his Workes, becoming the first English writer to dignify his dramas by terming them “works”. For this, he was ridiculed. However, in the same year, he received a yearly pension of 100 marks (about £60), leading some to identify him as England’s first Poet Laureate.


Scotland

             On 8 July 1618, Jonson set out from Bishopsgate in London and walked to Edinburgh, arriving in Scotland’s capital on 17 September. Here, he initially stayed with John Stuart, a cousin of King James, in Leith, and was made an honorary burgess of Edinburgh at a dinner laid on by the city on 26 September. Jonson stayed in Scotland until late January 1619.


Return To England and Decline

            On his return to England, Jonson was awarded an honorary Master of Arts degree from Oxford University. He continued to write masques, until his productivity began to decline in the 1620s.


           He resumed writing regular plays in the 1620s, but these are not considered among his best, and a fire destroyed his library in 1623. When James I died in 1625, Jonson lost much of his influence at the court and, with the accession of King Charles I, he felt neglected by the new court. However, he was named City Chronologer in 1628 and Charles increased Jonson’s annual pension to £100 and included a tierce of wine and beer.


              Later that year, he suffered the first of several strokes which left him bedridden, but he continued to write. Jonson produced four plays during the reign of Charles I, but none of these plays were successful.


Death

              Jonson died on or around August 6, 1637 and his funeral was held the next day. Upon his death, two unfinished plays were discovered among his mass of papers and manuscripts. One was The Sad Shepherd, and, although only two acts are extant, this represents a remarkable new direction for Jonson: a move into pastoral drama.


              Jonson was buried in the north aisle of the nave in Westminster Abbey. A monument to Jonson was erected in about 1723 by the Earl of Oxford and is in the eastern aisle of Westminster Abbey’s Poets’ Corner.


Marriage and Children

                In 1594, Jonson married Anne Lewis. They married at the church of St Magnus-the-Martyr, near London Bridge. While the marriage was unhappy, the couple had several children. St. Martin’s Church registers indicate that Mary Jonson, their eldest daughter, died in November 1593, at six months of age. Then a decade later, in 1603, Benjamin Jonson, their eldest son, died of Bubonic plague when he was seven years old. 32 years later, a second son, also named Benjamin Jonson, died in 1635. In that period, Ann Lewis and Ben Jonson lived separate lives for five years.

Works, Influence and Style


Drama

              Jonson’s work for theatres was in comedy, aside from two tragedies, Sejanus and Catiline, that largely failed to impress Renaissance audiences. All of Jonson’s plays vary slightly, with his earlier plays presenting looser plots and less-developed characters than those written later, for adult companies.




                In many of his early plays, plot is secondary to comedic events, and many of them are hypocritical and ill-tempered. Plays that were written in the middle of his career are more city comedies, usually with a London setting, themes of trickery and money, and a distinct moral ambiguity.

             

              Despite this, his plays all follow a similar style, and he wanted to write pieces that revived the classical premises of Elizabethan dramatic theory. However, he did often abstain from distant locations, noble characters, romantic plots and other staples of Elizabethan comedy, focusing instead on the satiric and realistic inheritance of new comedy and setting his plays in contemporary settings. His plays also had darker motives, such as greed and jealousy, and his characters were more recognisable.


Poetry

             Jonson has been called a pioneer in cavalier poetry and he is remembered for his revival of classical forms and themes, his subtle melodies, and his disciplined use of wit. His work is clearly influenced by his classical learning, with some of his better-known poems being close translations of Greek or Roman models and showing careful attention to form and style.


                In his poetry, Jonson accepted both rhyme and stress to mimic classical qualities, while his writing was satirical and largely in a genre that was popular among late-Elizabethan and Jacobean audiences.


Shakespeare

             Jonson’s relationship with Shakespeare has been speculated upon for many years. The two men knew each other; Shakespeare’s company produced a number of Jonson’s plays, at least two of which (Every Man in His Humour and Sejanus His Fall) Shakespeare certainly acted in. However, it is now impossible to tell how much personal communication they had and whether they were friends.


                It is thought that Jonson’s poem “To the Memory of My Beloved the Author, Mr. William Shakespeare and What He Hath Left Us” exemplifies the contrast which Jonson perceived between himself, the disciplined and erudite classicist, scornful of ignorance and sceptical of the masses, and Shakespeare, represented in the poem as a kind of natural wonder whose genius was not subject to any rules except those of the audiences for which he wrote.


               After the English theatres were reopened on the Restoration of Charles II, Jonson’s work, along with Shakespeare’s and Fletcher’s, formed the initial core of the Restoration repertory. It was not until after 1710 that Shakespeare’s plays (ordinarily in heavily revised forms) were more frequently performed than those of his Renaissance contemporaries. Many critics since the 18th century have ranked Jonson below only Shakespeare among English Renaissance dramatists.


Historical Significance

            Jonson is and was, even in his day, influential to the writers that came after him, providing the blueprint for many Restoration comedies, as well as for literary figures in more modern times. Unfortunately, in the Romantic era, Jonson suffered the fate of being unfairly compared and contrasted to Shakespeare, and thus his statical comedies were not as popular.


             In the 20th century, Jonson’s body of work has been subject to a more varied set of analyses, broadly consistent with the interests and programmes of modern literary criticism. Studying Elizabethan themes, it can be seen how Jonson’s work was shaped by the expectations of his time.


             Jonson’s works, particularly his masques, offer significant information regarding the relations of literary production and political power, and he is seen as an author whose skills and ambition led him to a leading role both in the declining culture of patronage and in the rising culture of mass media.


Major works

            Jonson's first major play was Every Man in His Humour. It was performed by a theater group called the Lord Chamberlain's Men. William Shakespeare performed the lead role. This play is a model of what is called the "comedy of humors," in which each character's action is ruled by a whim (impulse) or affectation (artificial behavior meant to impress others). After this play Jonson wrote Every Man out of His Humour in 1599 or early 1600, followed closely by Cynthia's Revels (1601) and Poetaster (1601).


          Jonson gained fame when he wrote Volpone, or the Fox in 1606. It was loved not only by the people in London but also by the scholars at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge. This was a major success for Jonson. After Volpone, Jonson wrote Epicoene, or the Silent Woman (1609), The Alchemist (1610), and Bartholomew Fair (1614).



Question:-2-Can you defferentiate  general characteristics of  renaissance litrature with that of age of Chaucer  and age of  revival of learning??


Introduction


             The period from 1340 to 1400 in English literature is known as the Age of Chaucer. To understand Chaucer’s works well, we should keep in mind the major events of this age. The important events of this period are stated below:

 


The historical background (1350-1450):

               The age of Chaucer includes the greater part of the reign of Edward III and the long French wars associated with his name; the accession of his grandson Richard II and the revolution of 1399, the deposition of Richard and the foundation of the Lancastrian dynasty. From the literary point of view of greater importance are the social and intellectual movements of the period; the terrible plague called the Black Death, brining poverty, unrest and revolt among the peasants, and the growth of the spirit of inquiry, which was strongly critical and found expression in the teachings of Wycliff and the Lollards, and in the stern denunciations of Langland.


                Chaucer lived and wrote in a world where the half shadows of the middle Ages were only beginning to scatter before the clear dawn light of modern culture. He, first of all men in England , reacted to the stimulation and emancipating movement called the renaissance, as it stirred in the souls of men beyond the Alps and his artistic consciousness escaped from the rigid bonds, the cramping conventionalities, the narrow inhibitions of the Middle Ages. From them he emerged into the world of living actualities that he exhibits in his powerful later word. In this sense, he was far beyond his age.


Literary Features of the Age:

                The standardizing of English: With Chaucer, the egglish language has shaken down to a kind of average – to the standard of the East Midland speech, the language of the capital city and of the universities –French and English have amalgamated to form the standard English tongue, which attains to its first full expression in the works of Chaucer.


A Modern Note 

                The real modern note begins to be apparent at this period. There is a shaper spirit of criticism, a more searching interest in man’s affairs and a less childlike faith in, and a less complacent acceptance of the established order. The vogue of the romance, though it has by no means gone, is passing and in Chaucer it is derided. The freshness of the romantic ideal is being superseded by the more acute spirit of the drama which even at this early time is faintly foreshadowed. Chaucer is regarded as the first English short story teller and the first English modern poet. He attempted the mew realistic task of portraying men and women as they were and described them so that the readers could recognize them as their own acquaintances. His characters have, for this reason, become a permanent treasure of English literature. Chaucer is the first great English writer to bring the atmosphere of romantic interest about the man and woman and the daily work of one’s own world which is the aim of nearly all modern literature, another more modern feature is that the age of anonymity is passing away with Chaucer.


Prose

             The age of Chaucer begins the foundation of an English prose style. Earlier specimens of prose were mainly experimental or purely imitative. But in the prose works of Malory and Mandeville, we get both original and individual prose. The English tongue is now ripe for a prose style. The language is setting to a standard; Latin and French are losing grip as popular prose mediums and the growing desire for an English bible exercises as steady pressure in favor of a Standard English prose.


Scottish Literature

              For the first time in English literature, in the person of Barbour (1316-1395) Scotland supplies a writer worthy of note. This is only the beginning, for the tradition is handed on to the powerful groups of poets of the succeeding period.


Medieval Chivalry:

             Chaucer’s England was predominantly medieval in spirit. And the most outstanding feature of the Middle Ages was chivalry. Chaucer’s Knight is a true representative of the spirit of medieval chivalry which was a blend of love, religion, and bravery. He has been a champion of not fewer than fifteen battles in the defense of Christianity. Even the tale that he tells is, like him, imbued with the spirit of medieval chivalry-though nominally it has the ancient Greece for its setting and has for its two important characters the two Greek heroes who’are said-to have flourished in an unspecified ” period of history. Chaucer almost completely medievalizes this story to enable us to have a taste of the chivalry of his age.


                 We must, however, point out here that the spirit of true chivalry was breathing its last in the age of Chaucer. The Knight, in fact, is a representative of an order which was losing its ground. The true representative of the new order is his young son, the Squire, who has as much taste for revelry as for chivalry. He is “a lover and a lusty bachelor.” He is singing and fluting all the day and love-struck as he is, he sleeps “no more than a nightingale.” However, we justly wonder if he could have proved himself another Arcite or another Palamon. At any rate, he truly represents the marked change in the world of chivalry which was fast coming over the age of Chaucer.


A Cross-section of Society

                 The Canterbury Tales gives us a fairly authentic and equally extensive picture of the socio-political conditions prevailing in England in the age of Chaucer. Each of the thirty pilgrims hails from a different walk of life, and among themselves they build up an epitome of their age. Each of them is a representative of a section of society as well as an individual. Even though the chief events of the age are not dealt with exhaustively by Chaucer, the thirty pilgrims provide us with the taste of life in the England of Chaucer. Chaucer was not a reformer but a delineator of reality. Legouis remarks  “What he has given is a direct transcription of daily life, taken in the very act,” as it were, and in its most familiar aspects. Chaucer’s work is the most precious document for whoever wishes to evoke a picture of life as it then was….


Trade, Commerce, and Craf

                  For the first time in history the trading and artisan sections of society were coming to their own in the age of Chaucer. With the fast expansion in trade and commerce merchants had become prosperous and so had the craftsmen whose goods they traded in. We are told by Chaucer that the Haberdasher, the Carpenter, the Weaver, the Dyer, and the Tapicer were well clothed and equipped. Their weapons were not cheaply trimmed with brass, but all with silver. They were so respectable-looking tha


         " Well seined each of them a fair burge

                 To sitten in a yeldhalle, on a days"


             They were no longer despised by the nobility. The Merchant is a typical representative of his class, and the forefather of Sir Andrew Freeport, the merchant who is a member of the Spectator Club as delineated by Addison and Steele in the eighteenth century. His character-sketch as done by Chaucer exudes prosperity. He is always talking about the increase in his income and knows well how to make money in the market place. The countrymen and merchants have always made the two most common objects of humour and satire. But Chaucer lets the Merchant go without much of satire, perhaps in recognition of the importance that his class had gained in his ag


Medicine

              Chaucer’s portrait of the Doctor of Physic is fairly representative of the theory and practice of medicine in his age. The knowledge of astronomy (rather astrology) was a must for a physician as all the physical ailments were supposed to be the consequences of the peculiar configurations of stars and planets. That is why the Doctor, too, was, “grounded in astronomy.” However, ”his study was but little on the Bible” perhaps because he had not much time to spare from his professional studies. He had amassed a fortune in the year of the great plague and was keen to keep it with him


        He fcepte that he wan in pestilenc

                For gold in phisik is a cordial

                    Therefore he lovede gold in special


             Gold in the form of a colloidal solution was administered as a tonic fay physicians. However, Chaucer has a sly dig at the Doctor in his reference to his gold-loving nature


The Church

               Through the ecclesiastical characters in The Canterbury Tales Chaucer constructs a representative picture of the condition of the Church and her ministers in his age. The Church had then become a hotbed of profligacy, corruption, and rank materialism. The Monk, the Friar, the Summoner, the Pardoner, and the Prioress are all corrupt, pleasure-loving, and materialistic in outlook. They forget their primary duty of guiding and edifying the masses and shepherding them to the Promised Land. The Monk is a fat. sporting fellow averse to study and penance. The Friar is a jolly beggar who employs his tongue to carve out his living. The Prioress bothers more about modish etiquette than austerity. The Pardoner is a despicable parasite trading in letters of pardon with the sinners who could ensure a seat in heaven by paying hard cash. The Summoner is, likewise, a depraved fellow. These characters fully signify the decadence that had crept into the Church. The only exception is the “Poor Parson’ apparently a follower of Wyclif who revolted against the corruption of the Church.


The New Learning:

              Though Chaucer’s age was essentially medieval, yet some sort of a minor Renaissance was evident. The French and Italian contemporary writers influenced considerably the course of English literature and thought. Petrarch arid Boccaccio, the two Italian writers, in particular, exerted this influence. The seeds of humanistic culture of the ancient Greeks, too, can be identified in this age. The “Clerk of Oxenford” represents the “new” intellectual culture which had percolated .into fourteenth-century England long before the Renaissance. He is an austere scholar who prefers twenty books of Aristotle’s philosophy on his bed’s head to gay clothes and musical instruments.


Conclusion

              Chaucer idealized the middle-class life in medieval England, and his ideas were revolutionary for that time. His vernacular English was also revolutionary for that time. The age of Geoffrey Chaucer is a time period that was defined by literary and cultural developments. the development of the vernacular language, the emergence of masses as an important literary audience, and the rise of gothic horror all contributed to this time period which still has great interest today


Friday, 16 September 2022

Macbeth

                Hello everyone,I am Mansi Gujadiya.I am study in Department of English MKBU. Today I will write this blog for thinking task given by Dilip Barad sir.In over syllabus we are study Macbeth written by William Shakespeare. Here I write some question...


Introduction of Author 

          


          Macbeth is written by William Shakespeare.William Shakespeare (birth date 26 April 1564 – 23 April 1616) was an English playwright, poet and actor. He is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's greatest dramatist.

            He is often called England's national poet and the "Bard of Avon" (or simply "the Bard"). His extant works, including collaborations, consist of some like

39 plays

154 sonnets

 three long narrative poems

few other verses

           And some of uncertain authorship. His plays have been translated into every major living language and are performed more often than those of any other playwright.He remains arguably the most influential writer in the English language, and his works continue to be studied and reinterpreted.

His 4 famous Tragedy are

1.Hamlet

2. Othello

3.Macbeth

4.Kinglear


Here we are discuss about Macbeth


Major introduction about this play



            Macbeth  is a tragedy by William Shakespeare. It is thought to have been first performed in 1606.It dramatises the damaging physical and psychological effects of political ambition on those who seek power. Of all the plays that Shakespeare wrote during the reign of James I, Macbeth most clearly reflects his relationship with King James, patron of Shakespeare's acting company. It was first published in the Folio of 1623, possibly from a prompt book, and is Shakespeare's shortest tragedy.


*Theme of  Macbeth

-Ambition

-Appearance and reality

-Guilt

-Famininity and Masculinity

-Fate

-Violence


Main Character

Macbeth

Lady Macbeth

Macduff

Banquo

King Duncan

Malcolm

Donalbain

Lady Macduf


 Question:-2 -Now we are discuss about one female character of this play .

Lady Macbeth

             

               “I fear thy nature;

                 It is too full o’ th’ milk 

                of human kindness


              Lady Macbeth is possibly Shakespeare’s most famous and vivid female character. Everyone, whether they have read or seen the Macbeth play, has a view of her. She is generally depicted in the popular mind as the epitome of evil, and images of her appear over and over again in several cultures. She is usually portrayed in pictures as something like a Disney character, a cross between Cruella DeVille and the wicked stepmother in Snow White.



               Although she has some of the most bloodthirsty lines in Shakespeare she is not quite Cruella De Ville or the wicked stepmother. The response she gets from the male characters suggests that she is a young, sexually attractive woman and, indeed, in her effort to influence Macbeth, she uses every method at her disposal, including the employment of her sexual charm


             She is usually depicted as a strong, tough woman and, in her drive to induce Macbeth to murder King Duncan, she appears to be that, but, having succeeded, it does not take long for her to crumble and break down, destroyed by guilt, and she ends up committing suicid


              Shakespeare does not have any evil characters. What he has are ordinary human beings, like you and me, placed in situations that challenge and test them. Some of them, like Iago in Othello, have personality defects, but that’s rare in Shakespeare and it’s not the case with Lady Mcbeth.



              The challenges that Shakespeare presents his characters with generates different responses from different people. Lady Macbeth’s challenge is that she discovers that her husband has been tempted by an encounter with three witches to do something about their prediction that he will become king. She knows that the king would have to die for that to happen. When she gets a message that King Duncan plans to spend the night with them at Glamys Castle it seems to confirm the thought that they would have to kill him and that this was their once in a lifetime opportunity. That’s the situation into which she has been thrust.

              this was their once in a lifetime opportunity. That’s the situation into which she has been thrust.


               She is as ambitious as Macbeth but she knows that for all his bravery in battle, all his soldierly and diplomatic qualities, he is basically much too soft –“too full of the milk of human kindness” – to take advantage of the opportunity. She makes up her mind to make him do it.


             And she is right about his lack of resolve – they talk it over and he tells her that he just can’t do it. She goes into high gear and virtually holds his hand through it. One of her strongest qualities is persistence and she shows it here. Macbeth hesitates, equivocates and falters but she holds firm. She argues the case, she mocks him, bringing his manhood into question, she appeals to his sense of loyalty to her, she takes him to bed, and she finally prevails.


              Macbeth kills Duncan in his sleep and from that moment their marriage begins to fall apart. They each fall into their own guilt-trip and hardly speak to each other. As king, Macbeth fears his political enemies and embarks on a reign of terror while Lady Macbeth stays in bed, unable to sleep, having nightmares when she does manage it. While walking and talking in her sleep she gives the game away about what they have done and sinks into a moral, physical and spiritual collapse. When Macbeth is on his last legs, with the rebels closing in, he gets the message that she’s dead. At that point, he says he doesn’t have time to think about it. “She should have died hereafter,” he says. Their partnership in this murderous enterprise has destroyed their marriage.


           The promise of strength that we see in her at the beginning of the play is an illusion. What we are seeing is naked ambition and a willingness to act on it without having the resources to deal with the consequences. We see how guilt can eat up your soul and destroy you. We see how hollow ambition is, both in her journey and Macbeth’s. (Read the most significant Macbeth ambition quotes.)

Character attributes

Some significant character attributes of Lady Macbeth are:


Controlling 

         she understands that her husband doesn’t have the savageness required to murder the king of his own accord, so she manipulates him. She plans out the murder, then takes control of events when Macbeth loses his mind.

Cruel 

           she is a violent, cold-blooded character who is happy to scheme the murder. She ridicules Macbeth when he doesn’t agree to participate in her violent plans.

Two-faced 

         she welcomes King Duncan like a friend whilst at the same time planning his murder. She also advises Macbeth to be two-faced.


 Question:-2 Macbeth a Tragedy of Ambition


Introduction 

  In Macbeth, ambition is presented as a dangerous quality. It is the driving forces of the play. It is ambition which causes the downfall of Macbeth and triggers a series of deaths in the play. Macbeth is inspired by the prophecies of the Witches to be ambitious and his ambition is driven by Lady Macbeth.

 

Macbeth a Tragedy of Ambition


               When the Witches meet Macbeth and Banquo, they greet Macbeth as the Thane of Glamis and the Thane of Cawdor, and predict that he will be the king of Scotland. Of Banquo, the Witches predict that he will be the begetter of a line of kings. When Rosse and Angus inform Macbeth about the conferment by King Duncan of the title of the Thane of Cawdor on him, Macbeth hopefully begins to look forward to the fulfillment of the final prediction, that is, of his becoming king. Thus, the prophesy of the Witches had made a deep impression on Macbeth’s mind. When Duncan nominates Malcolm to be to the heir to the throne, Macbeth thinks it to be an obstacle in the way of his becoming king. So, the thought of murdering Duncan has taken a firm root in his mind. It is evident that the Witches have stimulated in Macbeth an ambition which would have remained dormant if the Witches would make no prophecy.

   


            But the Witches are not fully responsible for Duncan’s murder. It is Lady Macbeth who gives the fuel to the fire of Macbeth’s ambition to kill Duncan. When Duncan arrived at Inverness, Macbeth controlled his ambition for the time being and did not kill Duncan. But his wife, Lady Macbeth brings him back to his original decision. Lady Macbeth convinced Macbeth that the murder would go undiscovered, and this was what gave Macbeth the courage and determination to proceed with his plans. Her forceful arguments revive his ambition and cannot but agree to his wife’s plan. So, he says:


            "  I am settled, and bend up

               Each corporal agent to 

               this terrible feat."


              Thus, Macbeth kills Duncan being influenced by his wife. Having taken the road of self damnation, he is now unable to stop. Macbeth is now always ready to remove every obstacle from his way to remaining in his state of power. Realizing the danger from Banquo and thinking of the prophecy that the throne will eventually pass to the descendants of Banquo, Macbeth hatches a conspiracy against that man and has him murdered. It is Macbeth’s second crime. He commits another crime warned by the first apparition. The first apparition warned Macbeth to beware of Macduff and Macbeth has already been feeling apprehensive of Macduff’s attitude towards him. As a result, he decides to massacre Macduff’s family.


             Here Macbeth degenerates into a butcher. His tragedy lies in this degeneration. At last comes the time of his doom. When he faces Macduff in the battlefield, he tells him that nobody born of a woman can kill him. At the time Macduff reveals that he was removed from his mother’s womb prematurely by means of a caesarean operation, and that he is not therefore no born of a woman in the normal sense. On hearing this Macbeth gives up all hopes and within moments he is slain by Macduff.


            Thus, ambition is the root cause of Macbeth’s downfall, as it planted the seeds of murder, which grew into an uncontrollable monster that eventually destroyed anyone who got in its way.

 

           And now day's we can see this type of ambition is over politician. They have a ambition of money and power.When election comes, over politician gives a so many promises.but when this person wins .They never follow his promises.


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Wednesday, 14 September 2022

Pride and Prejudice


             Hello everyone,my name is Mansi Gujadiya. I am study in Department of English MKBU. I write this blog for thinking task given by Yesha Bhatt mem. it's part of over study .

  

Question-1:- Which version of the novel is more appealing novel or Film?(adaptation) Why??  

          


                  I am a student of English literature. So I think novel are better than films.  Novel develop your imagination, are much more detailed than films, improve your English writing and are iproven to help you get better jobs. Meanwhile films are socially better, quicker to watch and have more job opportunities. But can watching a film get you a better mark on your next English assessment? It's not get good marks. Can watching a film give you the same depth of the story, then reading a book? I would answer no to all these questions; you may answer yes to a couple. It’s your choice whether to watch a film or read a book. But I suggest that read a novel.


 Question:-2 Character skatch of Elizabeth.


                Elizabeth Bennet is the much-beloved heroine of Jane Austen's 1813 novel Pride and Prejudice. Elizabeth is funny, intelligent, kind-hearted, and brave. She stands out because, unlike what was typical for romantic heroines of the day, her focus is not solely on marriage. Instead, Elizabeth has her own desires.




             Elizabeth's relationship with Mr. Darcy, the hero of the story, is often regarded as one of the most compelling romances in all of literature. Both Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy are complex characters with distinct flaws who grow and change throughout the novel.


Elizabeth Bennet Description

             Elizabeth is  also known as "Lizzy" to her loved ones, is around twenty years old during the novel. She is considered attractive, with her eyes as a standout feature; however, she is not considered as classically beautiful as her eldest sister, Jane.

             The second of five daughters, Elizabeth is part of the middle class of England. Known as the landed gentry, they are not part of the aristocracy with titles and power; however, they are not impoverished. They live on an estate named Longbourn, where people pay to work the land, thereby financially providing for the Bennets.

              Howver, the Bennets are not secure in their status. The estate is small, and due to the



               patriarchal society, the five Bennet daughters cannot inherit Longbourn after their father dies. Instead, Longbourn is destined to end in the hands of their male cousin Mr. Collins. As the women could not work and maintain social status, they would be financially dependent on Mr. Collins' good graces. Should he dislike them, he would be entitled to toss them onto the street, and there would be nothing that they could do about it. 



Elizabeth Bennet Personality

                  Elizabeth Bennet is bold, intelligent, and independent, with a witty sense of humor. She considers herself to be a proper young lady and a good judge of character. However, throughout the novel, Lizzy realizes that she is not perfect; she does misjudge people at times, and her pride eggs on these mistakes. Furthermore, her prejudice leads to her struggling to understand other peoples' points of view. Throughout the novel, Elizabeth Bennet's character evolves to become more humble and empathetic while maintaining that signature confidence in who she is.


Elizabeth Bennet Character Traits

                Elizabeth Bennet's character traits are complex. She has a great many strengths, but her pride and prejudice inhibit her growth.


Individuality and Wit

                 Elizabeth takes pride in her individuality. She knows who she is and what she wants in life and in a partner. She enjoys bantering with friends and family     but makes sure to keep it polite. She is described as having "a mixture of sweetness and archness... which made it difficult for her to affront anybody." She teases Mr. Darcy and finds it amusing when he turns down her invitation to dance: she has a self-aware sense of humor and enjoys making her friends laugh.


               However, Elizabeth's self-awareness is more limited than it initially appears. She is not aware of the factors shaping her own perspective and her prejudices coloring said perspective. Elizabeth's struggle to understand others' points of view (namely, Charlotte Lucas and Mr. Darcy) also stems from her individuality. However, seeing Charlotte's happiness with her state in life and several revelations about Mr. Darcy help Elizabeth realize the value of empathy.


Common sense and Intuitiveness

              Elizabeth displays great common sense and intuitiveness; the latter she prides herself on to her own folly. Although Elizabeth would like to marry for love, she is wise enough not to pursue Mr. Wickham because he cannot provide for her, and physical attraction does not guarantee marital happiness.


               As for her intuitiveness, she is able to recognize the emotions of others and understand unspoken opinions. However, Lizzy misunderstands critical moments, which lead her to assume Mr. Darcy is a bad person based on his rudeness. On the other hand, Elizabeth also assumes Mr. Wickham is a good person because he has impeccable manners and appears upfront and honest with her. Hence, she believes him when he tells her Mr. Darcy ruined his life, when in reality, Mr. Darcy was only protecting his teenage sister. This leads to Lizzy's lament:


"I, who have prided myself on my discernment! I, who have valued myself on my abilities! ... Had I been in love, I could not have been more wretchedly blind! But vanity, not love, has been my folly... from the very beginning of our acquaintance, I have courted prepossession and ignorance, and driven reason away, where either were concerned. Till this moment I never knew myself."


                 In this quote, Lizzy realizes that her own "vanity," or pride, and her prejudice prevented her from seeing the truth. Her pride meant that she did not question her initial judgment of Mr. Darcy's and Mr. Wickham's characters. These initial judgments were based on her assessment of their respective manners: the socially awkward, blunt Mr. Darcy acted rudely, while the affable Mr. Wickham charmed her.


Courage and Honesty

                 Elizabeth displays courage several times in the novel. She is honest throughout the story, even if the opinion is negative (a contrast with her sister Jane, which makes Lizzy less likable: Lizzy voices negative opinions while Jane does not). Furthermore, Lizzy can look at her flaws, admit her mistakes, and do betteConfidence and Self Respect : Elizabeth is different from others. She is wise, witty and intelligent and she knows it. This knowledge has given her confidence which enables her to hold her own against any one. It is this virtue which impresses Darcy and rattles and exas perates Lady Catherine. She is self respecting. She does not easily forget when anybody tires to treat her ligtly. Darcy may be rich but he has no right to humiliate any body who is less rich or poor and certainly not Elizabeth, of all persons, when Darcy contemptuously turns down Bingley’s suggestion of a dance with Elizabeth with an unbecoming remark out of pride and in Elizabeth’s hearing, she takes a mental note and does not feel easy unless she has turned down his offer of a dance with her.


 Perceptive:

                Elizabeth is a talented lady. She does not make mistake about Collins, about Chrles Bingley, about Caroline Bingley, about Mrs. Hurst and about Lady Catherine. She has equally rrectly perceived her parents and the malady that plagues their relationship and the consequences of such a relationship on the children. Her assessment of Jane and other three sisters is also correct.

 Different from her mother and sisters:

                  Elizabeth is in a class by herself. She is different from her mother and sisters, who are immature, tactless, vain and foolish. She is different from Jane, who is so sweet, simple and trusting. She is different from Marry who is silly and pendantic and also different from Kitty and Lydia, who are frivolous, flirtatious and foolish.


Understanding

                 Elizabeth is neither romantic nor emotional. When she is happy she does not feel it but she knows it. Her love is on the intellectual plane. She discusses, analyses and realizes and not feels. Through reason and logic, through encounters and discussions, she comes closer to Darcy. Whenever, they are alone, they do not talk of love. They try to know more and more about each other. This brings them so close that they decide to accept each other.


Conclusion:

                 In view of above characteristics, it is rightly = remarked “Elizabeth is the wittiest and the most brilliant of all Jane Austen’s heroines.” The close contact between Elizabeth and Darcy is the contact of minds. Elizabeth is given conciousness an awareness of herself a rational experiencing mind. She may be, like Jane Austen herself, called a satirist, a studies of character. She tells Darcy, there is no disadvantage in being stuck in a country neighbourhood since people themselves alter so much that something new to be observed in them forever.”


Que:-3: Character of  Mr.Darcy

              Though Jane Austen is not good creator of male characters, yet Darcy is one of the best creations of her. He has following characteristics in his character –

 


Physical Personality

                Fitzwilliam Darcy is a tall, handsome young bachelor of 27 years. He is a rich man with annual income of ten thousand pounds per annum. His family place is Pemberley House and his estate has extensive grounds with some of the finest woods in the country. Darcy is shown to be haughty and exclusive sort of person who creates a very bad impression by his lack of good manners. He disdains acquaintance with other members at the ball and rejects his friend’s suggestion to dance with Elizabeth and what is worse, is the contempluous comments against Elizabeth making her heared. His pride gives a way to rise prejudice against him in Elizabeth’s mind


Temperament

               Darcy is conscious of his superiority over others. He has a class prejudice against the low landed gentry of Longbourn neighbourhood and he makes no secret of his feelings. He is a man of reserved and refined nature. Because of his intellectual superiority over his friend he is a man of dominating personality. He is proved superior to Bingley in judgement and understanding.


 Keen observer: 

                His several confrontations, discussions and wordly duels with Elizabeth inspire him to know and admire Elizabeth and also to discover himself. He admits that he has pride and no talent to impress the strangers. He criticizes others for those follies, which he himself has. On his own admission, his temperament is resentful. Despite of these, he is not mean or secretive. He starts admiring Elizabeth and has no hesitation to accept it before Caroline.


 Honest and Frank:

                He is frank and honest. His honesty and frankness is admirable. He admits, without any hesitation, that his widom and dicretion advise him against such a step but he still finds himself helpless to check himself because he loves Elizabeth so much that he is compelled to propse her for marriage. He gives various reasons against such a marriage. He feels deeply hurt at her refusal but takes it with goods grace when she gives her reasons for her blunt refusal. He later admits that she has caused him to rediscover himself and he confesses his various failings. It is on account of his culture and refinement that he is so sane and sanguine.


 Shy and Sober

                   Darcy is a shy, sober and reserve person. He is neither frivolous nor demonstrative. He has great regard for social propriety. He is greatly impressed with Elizabeth’s resolve to leave Netherfield because he feels that Jane and Elizabeth have. stayed there for too long and also because caroline and her sister have been rude to Elizabeth. He does not like looseness in any one and that is the reason why he is against Jane-Bingley alliance. Mrs. Bennet and her two youngest daughters Catherine and Lydia are indiscreet in their speech and action. Similarly, he feels uneasy when Lady Catherine tries to humiliate Elizabeth at Rosings.


 Noble Character: 

                 He emerges as a noble character for whom no sacrifice is too great for a person who has won his good opinion, admiration and love. He goes out of his way not only to trace out Lydia and Wickham but also to bring about their marriage in order to save the honour of the Bennet family. He does this at a time when he has no hope of winning Elizabeth’s good opinion and change of heart because he does everything in the name of Mr. Gardiner, keeping his identity hidden and concealed. It is alo significant to note that he repaid the debts of Wickham after he left Lambton after misdeed.


Conclusion

               Summing up it may be said that he is a changed person at Pemberley. His true character and personality are reflected in his letter of explanations. Darcy, like Elizabeth, is unsentimental and unromantic in his early moods of snobbish pride and rudeness. Like Elizabeth, he also learns to understand her and himself, to penetrate beneath the surface at which first impressions operate. Like Elizabeth again, he also is a complex character who changes with the changing scenes and circumstances.



Question -4:-Give illustration of  that time of society.


Jane Austen  was an English novelist known primarily for her six major novels, which interpret, critique, and comment upon the British landed gentry at the end of the 18th century. 

Austen's plots often explore the dependence of women on marriage in the pursuit of favourable social standing and economic security.

 Her works critique the novels of sensibility of the second half of the 18th century and are part of the transition to 19th-century literary realism.

Her use of biting irony, along with her realism and social commentary, have earned her acclaim among critics and scholars.


Question:-5-Who  would be your choice to actors to play the role of characters??

   My choice of actors in this novel Pride and Prejudice is like


Elizabeth- Shradhdha kapoor

 Mr.Darcy -Sidhart Malhotra 

Mr.bingley-Varun dhaval

Jane-Vani kapoor

Mr Collins -Ritesh deshmukh

Wickham-Abhishak Bachchan 


Question:-6-Write a note on a scene you like most?






 

 Here I will share some clips of this movie.

This scene takes by the movie Pride and Prejudice -2005.


Thank you, for visiting my blog.







  

Sunday, 4 September 2022

Teacher's Day Celebration



 Hello everyone,

 I am mansi Gujadiya student of Department of English in MKBU. Today I will make this blog of a celebration of virtual Teacher's Day in over department. On 5 September we all are celebrating a teacher day. So I make a video. And i upload this video on YouTube.


           https://youtu.be/DDNFLuZ56FM




 
This video is about one poem.my topic is" My Grandmother". written by Elizabeth Jennings.

When you see this video.you can give a quizze.
This quizze is based on this video.link of this quizze is 


https://quizzory.in/id/6315990fcf97504e030e466d










Active and Passive Voice Example

Give a example of Active and Passive Voice  Introduction   Active and passive voice are two ways to structure sentences in English. In the a...