Tuesday 11 November 2008


Tales in the sand


By Neil Gaiman






"I love you more then a mortal man has ever loved a woman"...


...All that night they stayed togethet, and every living thing that could dream dreamed of love...




Love is so powerful that it can join, separate, create, destroy...love is everything but can be nothing when dealing with the laws of nature. A mortal woman, and endless man, attraction, kisses, tears, destruction, death, eternal suffering, inmortal souls, love forever.

Tribulaciones de un mago

Conclusion
Do I want to go on being what I am? what if I take the risk? what if I change my routine? is it possible?
These questions are the ones the magician asks himself each time he is about to start his performance. Poor magician, he is tired of doing the same thing and he wonders if people is tired too. The fact is that society expects us to fit a role, no matter how hard you try to make a change, no matter if you succeed or not, no matter your effort when struggling with the routine, we always end up in the same position.

Enchantment



On warm summer nights

the porch becomes our living room

where Mama takes her reading

and Dad and I play games

in the patch of brightness

the lamp scatters on the floor.

From the darkness, others come

small round bodies

clinging to the screens

which separate us

from the yard beyond.

Drawn to our light,

the June bugs watch our games

and listen to our talk till bedtime

when Mama darkens the porch

and breaks the spell

that holds them close to us.


By Joanne Ryder
Conclusion about the poem
Why isn't the poem called "June Bugs"? Well, I think the poem carries that title because the June Bugs are just a part of the scene but what really matters here is what the whole situation provokes in the child. Through the description of the sorrounding I came up with the idea of a happy child who is "enchanted" by the pleasant atmosphere created in the house.
Another idea could be that the beauty of the secene fills the reader with "enchantment"