Sunday, November 25, 2007

"Visuals That Speak" Essay and Visual


Speaking Visually


This poll was asking people “What type of pet would you like to have the most?” After the voting process was complete, the results were similar to what was expected.



The Mammals category received the highest number of votes which was 7. This amounts to about 58% in total. This score was expected because most people are accustomed to having household pets who they can look after and take care of. These type of pets are lovable and affectionate toward their owners. Such animals are like dogs, cats, rabbits, hamsters, and other types of rodents.



In second place, the Fishes received 2 votes which counted as 16%. These types of animals are easier to look after than others because they are confined to a certain space, opposed to animals who must be allowed to run around freely. They are also easy to look after because they do not require much human attention and interest.



Finally, the remaining categories came to a three way tie for third. They were Reptiles, Amphibians, and Birds. They all received 1 vote and this amounted for a mere 8%. At the end of the voting process, it is clear that the Mammals category is preferred over all the others.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Novel Essay

Romanticism Essay


A Malagasy Proverb says, “Better to be guilty in the eyes of men than in the eyes of God.” This quote explains that the reader should be pleasing the Lord and not the men of this earth even if it costs them some social relationships such as the minister and the captain in the following stories. In “The Minister’s Black Veil,” Mr. Hooper begins to wear a black veil that covers his appearance and this puts his entire Puritan society on edge especially because he refused to remove the covering up until the day of his death. In Moby-Dick, Ahab is the captain of the Pequod and he is on a desperate quest for revenge against his most sought after enemy which is a white whale named Moby-Dick even if he risks the lives of his crewmembers. These short stories demonstrate examples from the Romanticism period in that they are obsessed with the enigma of evil, the obscure sources of behavior and moral judgment, and the symbolism of land and sea. Hawthorne and Melville demonstrate how individuals are cast out of their societies because of their actions using the minister’s conflict with his Puritan society, the symbolism of his black veil, and Ahab’s nature toward his obsession of the sea.


The minister’s conflict with his Puritan society caused him to become an outcast of the town. For example, no attempts to discover the secret of the black crape were made and “the gentle and timid would turn aside to avoid him...children fled from his approach, breaking up their merriest sports, while his melancholy figure was yet afar off” (Hawthorne 324). This conflict shows that the people would refrain from looking at the tortured soul of the man hidden behind the black covering. This also demonstrates that Mr. Hooper felt alone and isolated from everyone else. In addition, when the minister was lying in his death bed he realized that “all through life that piece of crape had hung between him and the world: it had separated him from cheerful brotherhood and woman’s love, and kept him in that saddest of all prisons, his own heart” (Hawthorne 326). This shows that the conflict created by the fold of crape caused a separation between his community and the people he loved. This also explains that Mr. Hooper felt imprisoned and was having an internal conflict within his own being. Therefore, the minister became an outsider of his own Puritan society because of the conflicts caused by the black covering.


The symbolism of Mr. Hooper’s black veil worried many people and instilled fear in his town and it also expressed his abilities as a clergyman. For example, when the minister was going to give his first sermon while wearing the mysterious emblem “the subject had reference to secret sin, and those sad mysteries which we hide from our nearest and dearest, and would fain conceal from our own consciousness…with every tremor of his melancholy voice, the hearers quaked” (Hawthorne 320). This shows that the black veil could be a symbol of secret sin that Mr. Hooper was keeping deep inside himself. This also demonstrates that just by listening to the minister’s voice the citizens of the town felt very alarmed and filled with horror. In addition, along with all of the bad influences of the secret symbol it “had the one desirable effect, of making its wearer a very efficient clergyman…he became a man of awful power over souls that were in agony of sin” (Hawthorne 324). This shows that the mysterious emblem could be a symbol of authority or influence over his brothers of the church. This also explains that the minister had power over those in need of consolation and he could sympathize with all their dark affections. Therefore, the symbolism of Mr. Hooper’s black veil placed fear and terror into his town and it helped him to demonstrate his abilities as a clergyman.


Ahab’s fascination with the sea caused him to become an insane and temperamental captain of the Pequod and made him lose the loyalty of his shipmates. For example, the ship had begun its whaling voyage and “it was a cloudy, sultry afternoon; the seamen were lazily lounging about the decks, or vacantly gazing over into the lead-colored waters” (Melville 230). This demonstrates how Captain Ahab viewed the ocean and how he admired it to the extent of living on it his whole life. This also shows that his crew no longer believed in his quest to defeat the white whale, they misunderstand his passion for whaling and would just see him as a crazed maniac. In addition, when Ahab was losing his temper he began to tell his lazy shipmates that the “unsounded ocean you gasp in, is Life; those sharks, your foes; those spades, your friends; and what between sharks and spades you are in a sad pickle and peril poor lad” (Melville 338). This explains how Captain Ahab felt about the deep blue sea and what it meant to him, it was his life and his home. This also shows how his crew misinterpreted his drive and determination for madness and obsession. Ahab became an insane and explosive captain and lost the faithfulness of his shipmates because of his fascination with the sea and its inhabitants.


The way individuals are cast out of their societies because of their actions is demonstrated using the minister’s conflict with his Puritan society, the symbolism of his black veil, and Ahab’s nature toward his passion of the ocean in Hawthorne and Melville’s stories. The minister was cast out of his community because of his choice to wear a black covering. This mysterious emblem had both undesirable and desirable influences in his society which shaped the way he lived his life forever more. Ahab’s fixation with the sea caused him to lose the dependability of his crew and made him into an insane and highly strung captain. There are many lessons that a reader can learn from these stories such as the fact of not becoming too focused and obsessed with one goal to the point that one excludes the more important things in life. If the reader is self-centered and does not realize that the things one does affects the people around them, then the most important relationships will be shattered and most likely ruined. Therefore, cherish the moments that one has now and do not waste time striving for things that one cannot achieve without the help of the Lord.


Works Cited
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. “The Minister’s Black Veil.” Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, Inc, 1999. (318-327).
Melville, Herman. Moby-Dick. Bantam Books, Inc. New York, New York, 1967.

Sudoku Puzzles

Pretty Colors

Hey everyone,Run your mouse over the box and click to change the color. If you right click and zoom out a little you'll see a red flashing heart <333 click on it and see what happens... Have fun and create your own masterpiece :)