Check out this sample PA paper ballot…particularly the first candidate for County Commissioner!!
November 19th, 2009:
Election
Check out this sample PA paper ballot…particularly the first candidate for County Commissioner!!
Election
Check out this sample PA paper ballot…particularly the first candidate for County Commissioner!!
Election
Check out this sample PA paper ballot…particularly the first candidate for County Commissioner!!
Wharton and Whitman – musings
Summer is depressing. Sure it’s the story of a young woman’s sexual awakening, but her awakening seems largely futile as she does not end up truly awakened – truly independent. The final decision she makes (to keep her baby and marry Royall) seems only to imprison her. Yet, Dr. Singley brought to light the idea of the right of a child to tell his/her own story. Royall is usually the mouthpiece of Charity’s story and of Charity’s mother. So at the end of the novel (in this vein of telling one’s story), I found a tinge of hopefulness. (A tinge…her life will certainly be no cakewalk from here.) By keeping her child and rewriting/retelling her mother’s story, Charity becomes the teller of the story. She gets to tell the story – and so the “mouthpiece” has a gender change here – from the manly, violent, protective Royall to Charity, a young woman feeling her way through life and finding herself along the way.
So I see Whitman a bit here. Whitman sought to give a voice to America’s unsung. This is especially evident in the poems where he extols the virtues of the common man (one such poem is “True Conquerors”) and in Drum-Taps where he is often focused on the unnamed soldiers.
And of course, Whitman – in giving himself a voice in “Song of Myself” is telling his story.
Wharton and Whitman – musings
Summer is depressing. Sure it’s the story of a young woman’s sexual awakening, but her awakening seems largely futile as she does not end up truly awakened – truly independent. The final decision she makes (to keep her baby and marry Royall) seems only to imprison her. Yet, Dr. Singley brought to light the idea of the right of a child to tell his/her own story. Royall is usually the mouthpiece of Charity’s story and of Charity’s mother. So at the end of the novel (in this vein of telling one’s story), I found a tinge of hopefulness. (A tinge…her life will certainly be no cakewalk from here.) By keeping her child and rewriting/retelling her mother’s story, Charity becomes the teller of the story. She gets to tell the story – and so the “mouthpiece” has a gender change here – from the manly, violent, protective Royall to Charity, a young woman feeling her way through life and finding herself along the way.
So I see Whitman a bit here. Whitman sought to give a voice to America’s unsung. This is especially evident in the poems where he extols the virtues of the common man (one such poem is “True Conquerors”) and in Drum-Taps where he is often focused on the unnamed soldiers.
And of course, Whitman – in giving himself a voice in “Song of Myself” is telling his story.
Wharton and Whitman – musings
Summer is depressing. Sure it’s the story of a young woman’s sexual awakening, but her awakening seems largely futile as she does not end up truly awakened – truly independent. The final decision she makes (to keep her baby and marry Royall) seems only to imprison her. Yet, Dr. Singley brought to light the idea of the right of a child to tell his/her own story. Royall is usually the mouthpiece of Charity’s story and of Charity’s mother. So at the end of the novel (in this vein of telling one’s story), I found a tinge of hopefulness. (A tinge…her life will certainly be no cakewalk from here.) By keeping her child and rewriting/retelling her mother’s story, Charity becomes the teller of the story. She gets to tell the story – and so the “mouthpiece” has a gender change here – from the manly, violent, protective Royall to Charity, a young woman feeling her way through life and finding herself along the way.
So I see Whitman a bit here. Whitman sought to give a voice to America’s unsung. This is especially evident in the poems where he extols the virtues of the common man (one such poem is “True Conquerors”) and in Drum-Taps where he is often focused on the unnamed soldiers.
And of course, Whitman – in giving himself a voice in “Song of Myself” is telling his story.
Wharton and Whitman – musings
Summer is depressing. Sure it’s the story of a young woman’s sexual awakening, but her awakening seems largely futile as she does not end up truly awakened – truly independent. The final decision she makes (to keep her baby and marry Royall) seems only to imprison her. Yet, Dr. Singley brought to light the idea of the right of a child to tell his/her own story. Royall is usually the mouthpiece of Charity’s story and of Charity’s mother. So at the end of the novel (in this vein of telling one’s story), I found a tinge of hopefulness. (A tinge…her life will certainly be no cakewalk from here.) By keeping her child and rewriting/retelling her mother’s story, Charity becomes the teller of the story. She gets to tell the story – and so the “mouthpiece” has a gender change here – from the manly, violent, protective Royall to Charity, a young woman feeling her way through life and finding herself along the way.
So I see Whitman a bit here. Whitman sought to give a voice to America’s unsung. This is especially evident in the poems where he extols the virtues of the common man (one such poem is “True Conquerors”) and in Drum-Taps where he is often focused on the unnamed soldiers.
And of course, Whitman – in giving himself a voice in “Song of Myself” is telling his story.
Wharton and Whitman – musings
Summer is depressing. Sure it’s the story of a young woman’s sexual awakening, but her awakening seems largely futile as she does not end up truly awakened – truly independent. The final decision she makes (to keep her baby and marry Royall) seems only to imprison her. Yet, Dr. Singley brought to light the idea of the right of a child to tell his/her own story. Royall is usually the mouthpiece of Charity’s story and of Charity’s mother. So at the end of the novel (in this vein of telling one’s story), I found a tinge of hopefulness. (A tinge…her life will certainly be no cakewalk from here.) By keeping her child and rewriting/retelling her mother’s story, Charity becomes the teller of the story. She gets to tell the story – and so the “mouthpiece” has a gender change here – from the manly, violent, protective Royall to Charity, a young woman feeling her way through life and finding herself along the way.
So I see Whitman a bit here. Whitman sought to give a voice to America’s unsung. This is especially evident in the poems where he extols the virtues of the common man (one such poem is “True Conquerors”) and in Drum-Taps where he is often focused on the unnamed soldiers.
And of course, Whitman – in giving himself a voice in “Song of Myself” is telling his story.
Annotations for Group 1 (To Thos Who’ve Fail’d, The Bravest Soldiers and A Font of Type, Paumanok.)
To Those Who’ve Fail’d
TO those who’ve fail’d, in aspiration vast,
To unnam’d soldiers fallen in front on the lead,
To calm, devoted engineers – to over-ardent travelers – to pilots on
their ships,
To many a lofty song and picture without recognition – I’d rear
laurel-cover’d monument,
High, high above the rest – To all cut off before their time,
Possess’d by some strange spirit of fire,
Quench’d by an early death.
The Southerners
Civil War
Unnamed soldiers who got shot
The people who profited from the war and reconstruction
No one will know what really happened here
But I’m going to tell them
Everyone who thinks they’re all that and a bag of potato chips
Everyone who died in the war
They were all in a tizzy over the awesome that they were going to do
But then they didn’t
Simplified Version:
People think they know, but they have no idea. Kicking ass might seem like a good idea, until it’s your ass thats kicked. Truth.
The Bravest Soldiers
BRAVE, brave were the soldiers (high named to-day) who lived through
the fight;
But the bravest press’d to the front and fell, unnamed, unknown.
Living posers
Dead O.G.s
Simplified Version:
People telling stories today about how brave they were back then may have just chilled in the back like wussies.
The real hard core guys died on the front lines.
A Font of Type
This latent mine – these unlaunch’d voices – passionate powers,
Wrath, argument, or praise, or comic leer, or prayer devout,
(Not nonpareil, brevier, bourgeois, long primer merely,)
These ocean waves arousable to fury and to death,
Or sooth’d ease and sheeny sun and sleep,
Within the pallid slivers slumbering.
Typeface decision is very important in determining the tone of your message
For instance, loud and impressive Gotham Black, classy Baskerville Italic, overused, but still very nice Trajan, God-forsaken Comic Sans, and its equally agitating side-kick, Papyrus
But all of these typefaces have emotion, unlike Times New Roman, Regular, Size 12, Double Spaced. (Actually he mentions a size 8 and nothing about double spacing, but this is a modern reference to what he’s talking about.)
Ink being printed on a big printing press and drying…
…On white paper
Simplified Version: If you want to make your next paper look really nice, give some thought into the font. I personally recommend Garamond, or Baskerville if you have it.
PAUMANOK
Sea-beauty! stretch’d and basking!
steamers, sails,
And one the Atlantic’s wind caressing, fierce or gentle — mighty
hulls dark-gliding in the distance.
Isle of sweet brooks of drinking-water — healthy air and soil!
Isle of the salty shore and breeze and brine!