Sunday, October 23, 2011

The Rejection Letter

PS: I am really glad to be a guy, since I could choose to write the rejection letter instead of a love letter that I have never been good at. J 

It is definitely your right to choose me. So I felt lucky to be the one you love, and your letter moved me a lot. However, I can accept you. I am sorry. I have too much schoolwork to do, and I might have no time to be with you. Additionally, my parents want me to keep focus on the study since both of us are the seniors who are going to the college in the nearly future. I think it will be a good idea for us to work together rather than flirt with each other everyday. I wish I do not hurt you, and I hope we are still best friends. 



Yours truly, 
Andy

Friday, October 21, 2011

The Duel Part of Onegin



After Onegin flirted with Olga, Olga apparently attracted to Onegin. Due to his exaggerated earnestness and inexperience, Lensky is wounded to the core and issues a challenge to Onegin for a request of a duel. However Onegin does not want to have a duel with Lensky, since he is Onegin’s best friend, and there must be someone’s death. So he reluctantly accepts the duel. In the next day, Lensky waits with his assistant who counts the exactly third-two steps for the distance. It is Lensky’s first time to duel, and actually he has no experience about that. However, Onegin is expert at this cruel “game”. Therefore, neither of them shoots to the other one at the beginning, what they do is just walking closer towards each other. 

In the movie, Lensky shoots first, but misses. Then Onegin holds down the gun then shoot Lensky in the head. Then Onegin steps up to Lensky, feeling so regretful. However, things are a little bit different in the novel. Actually Onegin shoot first and Lensky just falls down and lies on the ground, them the assistants take Lensky away as Onegin turns around and leaves.

After that, Onegin then quits his country estate, choosing travel as a means of deadening his feelings of remorse.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

The Extremes in Tatiana's Letter

Tatyana’s letter to Onegin. 


Another! No, no one on this earth 

Is there to whom I’d give my heart! 

That is ordained by highest fate… 

That is heaven’s will- that I am yours; 

My life till now was but a pledge, 

Of meeting with, a forward image; 

You were sent by heaven of that I’m sure 

To the grave itself you are my savior… 

In dreams you have appeared to me 

Though yet unseen, I held you dear. 



I see this part of is the most extreme part of the poem. Tatyana indicates that Onegin is the only one she would give her heart to, and even “that is ordained by highest fate” and “heaven’s will”. These words in the poem show Tatyana’s great passion of love to Onegin, and strong will to belong to Onegin. “You were sent by heaven” and “you are my savior”, these two pieces of poem absolutely show the image of Onegin in Tatyana’s eyes. 

Usually, a girl will not say such extreme thing to the man she loves. Therefore, I consider it as the most extreme part of the poem. 

Monday, October 17, 2011

Does art depict life or does life depict art?



In my personal perspective, the art depicts life.

The art is from the life, and what it does is to reflect the life in another way. Eugene Onegin, one of Pushkin’s most famous works, is really a good example of my point of view. In this novel, the main character Onegin shares a similar life with its author, Pushkin. Both of them are born in the upper-class family, grow up in the good circumstance, get well education. Both of them have grand dreams, want to change something, and world-weary. Additionally, the time cost for Pushkin was really long. He did not finish the whole story in several months, but seven years. He actually did not have a planned structure of the novel when he started. What he did was to publish the novel section by section, and see what would happen as he experienced more. Therefore, in these characters he created, we are able to see the reflection of him. Not only the people in literature get the inspiration from the life, many painters were strongly influenced by it as well. One typical example is Vincent Van Gogh, who is the most well known painter in 19th century. The topic in his paintings was really related to his personal experience. The Sunflowers, a series of paintings, reflected his glorification to love, his pursuit to the freedom, and his idiographic comprehension of life when he was so depressed about the life he had at that period.

General speaking, art usually depicts life since life is the best source for artisans to get inspiration.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Eugene Onegin Reading Log

We started to learn Onegin today. As I saw the website, I noticed that this story is really long and the translation from Russian to English seems so complicated. However, i heard about it before, and hopefully there is some chinese version to help me understand this great book.

  • Eugene Onegin is a novel in verse written by Alexander Pushkin published between 1825 and 1832. 
  • It is a classic of Russian literature, and its eponymous protagonist has served as the model for superfluous men.
  • Almost the entire work is made up of 389 stanzas of iambic tetrameter with the unusual rhyme scheme "AbAbCCddEffEgg", where the uppercase letters represent feminine rhymeswhile the lowercase letters represent masculine rhymes. This form has come to be known as the "Onegin stanza" or the "Pushkin sonnet."


Four main characters:

Eugene Onegin: A dandy from Saint Petersburg, about twenty-six years old. He is good at socializing and educated. But he is also a arrogant, selfish and world-weary cynic.

Vladimir Lensky: A young poet, about eighteen years old. He is a very romantic and naive dreamer. He was killed by Onegin in a fight from Olga.

Tatyana Larina: She is a shy and quiet girl, but also the passionate landowner's daughter. She loves Onegin and writes letter to him. However, she get rejected at the beginning. 

Olga Larina: A beautiful and romantic girl, but also a vapid coquette.

I think this novel is strongly related to the author himself, and I consider the Onegin as the reflection of Pushkin. Onegin is a guy from the Russian upper class, however although he is cultured and really good at socializing, he still has the common problem shared by most of the upper class people, arrogant and selfish. Also, both of Onegin and Pushkin are world-weary. They are tired of the life they had before, and try to change. Additionally, both of them are the loser in the love. Onegin finally could not be with Tatyana, the girl he truly loves, while Pushkin's marriage was the miserable.


Book 1:The first part of the novel mainly introduces the main character Eugene Onegin. Onegin is an educated man form St. Petersburg and very world-weary. He is really good at socializing and very popular among the upper class society. He lives in a luxurious way however, he gets bored with this country life.

Book 2: He meets Lensky, a young romantic poet engaged to Olga. Then the author introduces Olga’s sister, Tatiana. Tatiana is a shy, emotionless, beautiful and smart young woman.

Book 3: After Onegin meets Tatiana, Tatiana believes that she falls in love with Onegin. So she writes a letter to Onegin, and wishes him to answer that. However, things do not happen in the way she expects. Onegin does not reply anything, and Tatiana is so depressed.

Book 4: Onegin does not want to marriage and love right now, but he does love the way that Tatiana expresses her love. Also, the beauty and honesty attract him very much. However, Onegin does not think he is ready now, since in his opinion, the marriage is dreary and depressing and it absolutely does not fit the way he lives.

Book 5: Later Lensky invites Onegin to Tatiana’s name day celebration and try to make Onegin and Tatiana o be together. However, Onegin was late to the party, and even after he arrives there, he starts flirt with Lensky’s girl, Olga, Lensky is so mad that he has to use a duel to end this. So he decides to fight with Onegin. In the end, Onegin unwillingly kills Lensky who is his best friend.

Book 6: Onegin could not forget the death of Lensky even 16 years have been passed. By an accidental chance, Onegin meet Tatiana in a dance. He notices that Tatiana has become the wife of a duke.

Book 7; Onegin finally finds out that Onegin is the true love he has been looking for so long. Therefore, he falls in love with Tatiana like a child, and tries to get her favor. However, although Tatiana still loves Onegin, she could not betray her husband. So she chooses to reject Onegin and leaves away sadly.