By Becca Zoller. Ovids Metamorphoses line 576-748 Tells the story of the Greek myth Completed in 8 A.D.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
Advertisements

House on a Cliff By Louis MacNeice. Indoors the tang of a tiny oil lamp. Outdoors The winking signal on the waste of sea. Indoors the sound of the wind.
BY:Dajana Smiljanic Period 1 Mrs.Thompson. Artemis, as well as her brother,(Apollo)was the daughter of Leto and Zeus. Artemis, as well as her brother,(Apollo)was.
“Long Walk To Forever” by Kurt Vonnegut
Narcissus,Hyacinth,Adoni s. In Greece flowers are considered to be the most beautiful. They are rarely found in Greece because Greece is a place of rugged.
A.
The River God. Things to know… Rivers in human history and myth have always been seen as sacred. Prehistoric people used to think that rivers had gods.
Outcome: Renaissance Writers
Father Rhine tells: Charlemagne‘s Favourite Daughter.
Poetry Analysis Essay.
The Things we do for Love The story of Ruth. 8 Then Naomi said to her two daughters-in-law, “Go back, each of you, to your mother’s home. May the Lord.
Andrew Marvell Presented by: Sarah Beaty & Fidela Gutierrez.
A Good Citizen of the United States
THE FLOWER MYTHS Narcissus Hyacinth Adonis.
Valentine’s Day. What is Valentine’s Day? Saint Valentine's Day, commonly shortened to Valentine's Day, is celebrated every year on February 14. We are.
Lyrics I'm so tired of being here Suppressed by all my childish fears And if you have to leave I wish that you would just leave Because your presence still.
Love Song By Dorothy Parker.
Today, in our R.E lesson, we are going to...
Poetry Analysis Essay.
Kiera and Tasha. Apollo is the son of Zeus and Leto, he has a twin sister named Artemis, the god of the natural environment. Apollo had numerous love.
The legend of TWO rivers: OLT and MUREŞ. Once upon the time, when the stories were reality, on the top of the Eastern Carpathians, there was a fortress.
The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life, And he who wins souls is wise. Proverbs 11:30 (NKJV)
The Story of Siddhartha. Siddhartha wanted to leave to explore the world. He wanted his father’s permission to leave so he stood still. Will you stand.
Stories of and. The Moon’s Sleeping Love (pg. 118)
Created by Verna C. Rentsch and Joyce Cooling Nelson School
A Christmas Story. On the last day before Christmas, I hurried to go to the supermarket to buy the gifts I didn't manage to buy earlier. When I saw all.
Allusion Identifying classical, historical, and literary allusions in context.
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Sight Words.
Thank you for coming to Samsbiblestories.com and for taking a look at the lessons I have added. These lessons are the result of years of teaching Sunday.
GREEK MYTHS AND GODS DAY-DAY A.KA. DASHAWN CALDWELL.
Reading & Speaking. “The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen nor touched but are felt in the heart.”
Father of the Romantics
Instructions: Follow these slides for text and paraphrases of the rest of this tale. Complete the study guide with your partner. Don’t forget to complete.
By Sadie Jo Boring FDREL A biography written about his life by his family in 1975.
Vocabulary Idioms & Phrases Reading~ Paragraphs 5-8 Post-reading.
CCLI# Let Everything That Has Breath CCLI# Let everything that, Everything that, Everything that has breath praise the Lord.
An Introduction to Feldman 1.Describe and Name the VISUAL FACTS. 2.Analyze the VISUAL FACTS: Using Form Descriptors: Line, Light, Shape, Color and Temperature,
Daphne and apollo.
If I couldIf I couldIf I could My love, you’re always in my heart# If I could have it all, I would choose to have your love. Don’t you know How my heart.
Mirror By Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath was born on October 27, 1932 and died on February 11 th, She was an American novelist, poet and short story writer.
Sight Word List.
Let Everything That Has Breath
5 States of Jesus This lesson looks at Jesus Through all history.
How to Handle Tough Times 8 Things Job Lost A study of Job (2 of 4) Job 1:18-19 June 12 - AM.
Jane Eyre Artifacts By: Gina Potter. Artifact 1 The film “The Little Princess” is about a young girl whose.
Apollo Sadie Ramie. Background  Born on the island of Delos.  Son of Zeus and Leto and Artemis’s twin.  He is the god of Light and Truth, the master.
Sight Words.
High Frequency Words.
REVIEW from previous lesson: The censer and the burning coal represent ________ carrying our Lord _________. True or False: The Deacon can use the censer!
She Ran Well to Finish Well MARY Mary She raised a son… And he went down with them and came to Nazareth and was submissive to them. And his mother treasured.
[End of Section] A symbol is an ordinary object, event, person, or animal to which we have attached a special meaning. **What Is a Symbol?
HOW ROBIN HOOD CAME TO LIVE IN THE GREEN WOOD. Very many years ago there ruled over England a king, who was called Richard Cœur de Lion. But more than.
Rhetorical Devices – How to Analyse. Step 1: Identify the device  This is an example of a paradox.
Ovid and Later Poets Exploring the complex psychology of Ovid's myths through English and American poetry.
A Modern Approach to Anne Bradstreet By Dakota Watts 10/12/12.
Dr. Hannah Harrington Christian Cathedral February 21, 2016.
By: Nicholas wooldredge Second period.  Apollo appears as a young man with curly golden hair. He carries a gold bow and arrow and looks shiny like the.
High Frequency words Kindergarten review. red yellow.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
Morning Prayer 10/4/15. Gospel Reading – Mark 10:2-16 Some Pharisees came, and to test him they asked, “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife?” He.
The Tree Wife Adapted by Tessa Welch from the Xhosa folktale, Kamiyo of the River Illustrations by Jemma Kahn.
Mother Hulda 4A10H070 羅薇 4A1C0003 李婉慈 4A1C0055 呂佳宴.
“THE RELATIONSHIP THAT MATTERS”. THE RELATIONSHIP THAT MATTERS 1 Corinthians 15:33 (NIV) Do not be misled: “Bad company corrupts good character.”
By: Cole Hecimovich, Thomas Murff, and Will Riley
By Kyra Thomas AP English 12 March 3, 2011
Eight Brief Tales of Lovers
Dante, The Divine Comedy: Inferno
The of and to in is you that it he for was.
Presentation transcript:

By Becca Zoller

Ovids Metamorphoses line Tells the story of the Greek myth Completed in 8 A.D.

Apollo was an over confident archer who one day ran into Eros, an archer and the son of Aphrodite. Apollo, in boasting of his archery skills, insults Eros. Eros has two arrows: one dipped in gold and another dipped in lead. He strikes Apollo with the one dipped in gold and Daphne, daughter of Peneus the river god, with the one dipped in lead. Apollo is cursed, desperate for Daphnes love. Daphne runs from him. In order to save her, Peneus transforms Daphne into a laurel tree. Apollo adorns himself with some of the laurel tree leaves and holds in his heart a special place for the tree as a symbol of Daphne.

Canzoniere Part 23 Nel dolce tempo de la prima etade ( ) Story of Daphne and Apollo Also presented in comparison with several other Ovidian myths in this work A Young Lady Beneath a Laurel Tree Mentions laurel tree in reference with the speakers love for Laura young lady beneath a laurel tree when the green leaves are no more on the laurel I will follow that sweet laurel/through the burning sun or through the snow Love floods at the foot of the hard laurel my idol sculpted in living laurel Speaker compares himself with Apollo which leads Laura to be unattainable A more traditional view of the Daphne and Apollo myth, holds to the Greek tradition

The Story of Phoebus and Daphne, Applied Written in 1645 Carries metaphor as a figure of unattainable love throughout poem Like Phœbus sung the no less amorous boy;/ Like Daphne she, as lovely, and as coy Wallers adaptation of the story of Daphne and Apollo applied to the courtship of Lady Dorothy Sidney

Endymion Book Four 1818 Ye shall for ever live and love, for all Thy tears are flowing. By Daphnes fright, behold Apollo! Tells the story of the Greek myth of Endymion who loved and pined after the moon goddess, Selene, named Cynthia in the poem The comparison to Daphne and Apollo in book four implies that Cynthia was unattainable for Endymion, but this metaphor does not hold out when Cynthia declares that she couldnt move on from him.

The Tree I stood still and was a tree amid the wood, Knowing the truth of things unseen before; Of Daphne and the laurel bow And that god-feasting couple old that grew elm-oak amid the wold. Shows the speaker knew the truth about lovers, such as Daphne and Apollo, and that they would never be together Portrays the idea of love that will never be reciprocated in a different way, so that it wasnt the woman that was unattainable, but the love itself

A Prayer for My Daughter 1921 O may she live like some green laurel Rooted in one dear perpetual place. How but in custom and in ceremony Are innocence and beauty born? Ceremony's a name for the rich horn, And custom for the spreading laurel tree. The speaker in the first quote wishes for their child to be as desirable and beautiful as Daphne, represented by the laurel tree, but wishes her to be as stubborn and untouchable by lovers as Daphne was when she was turned into a laurel The second quote shows the laurel as innocent and beautiful.

Virgin In A Tree 1958 Ever since that first Daphne Switched her incomparable back For a bay-tree hide, respect's Twined to her hard limbs like ivy The Daphne in Plaths poem is a symbol of innocence and beauty as well as a virginal symbol. Plath compares a woman to a tree to suggest that women should protect themselves.

Where I Live in the Honorable House of the Laurel Tree 1981 Compares speaker to Daphne as being tortured by Apollo and by being turned into a tree Follows along the line of Plaths poem in the way where Apollo is seen as a negative figure The speaker, as a laurel tree, suffers. I live in my wooden legs and O my green green hands. Too late to wish that I had not run from you, Apollo, blood moves still in my bark bound veins, I, who ran nymph foot to root in flight, have only this late desire to arm the trees I lie within. The measure that I have lost silks my pulse. Each century, the trickeries of need pain me everywhere. Frost taps my skin and I stay glossed in honor, for you are gone in time. The air rings for you, for that astonishing rite of my breathing tent undone with your light. I only know how this untimely lust has tossed flesh at the wind forever and moved my fears toward the intimate Rome of the myth we crossed. I am a fist of my unease as I spill toward the stars in the empty years. I build the air with the crown of honor; it keys my out of time and luckless appetite. You gave me honor too soon, Apollo. There is no one left who understands how I wait here in my wooden legs and O my green green hands.

The allusion to the myth of Daphne and Apollo where Daphne is transformed into a laurel tree changes through poetic history. Keats poem is where the first shift begins to happen because the love is achieved in the end. Then, Pound moves away from the unattainable woman to the unattainable love. Yeats writes pushing the speakers daughter to be innocent and beautiful and unattainable like Daphne is when she is a laurel tree. Plath continues in the same route as Yeats, inspiring women to protect themselves as beautiful, innocent, and virginal like Daphne as a laurel tree. Sexton applies the myth post-transition by presenting the speaker as Daphne when she is a laurel tree and is tortured by nature and Apollo.

As the myth of Daphne and Apollo shifted in poetry, it moved away from the idea of a woman being unattainable to a man who lusted after her, and into the idea that Daphne, symbolically represented by the laurel tree, was a beautiful, innocent, and virginal figure. The speakers of several poems urge their audience to remain innocent by being like Daphne and the laurel tree. However, Sextons representation of the myth, being the most recent, applies both the original meaning of the myth in an inventive way by having the speaker of the poem be Daphne as the laurel tree as well as the more modern, developed meaning of Daphne as a suffering character.

df df bus%20apollo%20daphne%20laurel%20poetry&source=bl&ots=1GhYUBEwKR&sig=- kvGG_f_G57_fiZVb- gG6RU9V70&hl=en&ei=O6JWSoeaK8Gntgf7nYzJAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&r esnum=2 bus%20apollo%20daphne%20laurel%20poetry&source=bl&ots=1GhYUBEwKR&sig=- kvGG_f_G57_fiZVb- gG6RU9V70&hl=en&ei=O6JWSoeaK8Gntgf7nYzJAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&r esnum=2