English project has been passed in! ON TIME - our teacher gave us a week's extension so I managed to get it done! Yes! Business plan due tuesday, it's almost done! Land costs so much, especially if you're 'planning' to build a paintball/go-karts/bowling place. i'm gonna take a USB drive to school so I can finish it up tommorrow night lol....
Moncton Lock-in was Friday night. Service was great, especially since it was at the Ramada centre, rather than crammed into one of the nearby churches. It's true, 'Jesus is for losers'! Bro. Holmes preached an amazingly needed message. I pray some will realize the truth in his words before it's too late. The rest of the night was alright, but I won't go into detail on here.
I'll try to update this soon, but I need to go now. Goodbye, all.
Jeff
This blood can save a soul, heal the sick, mend the heart/ This blood can give you access to the very throne of God/ And it still can go the distance, through the pain to where you are/ This blood is for you: the blood of the Lamb
-Carman
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Saturday, March 15, 2008
HELP!!!!
So I have a 3000 word poetry analysis project for next Wednesday, and a business plan for early April....Yahoo! I'm so far behind....plus I worked Friday and will be from 930 til 1600! Then I have to go get dad from the Fredericton airport at 1900. So I guess I'll be working pretty hard next week on schoolwork-no facebook, no checkin on the book search, lol-until I get it done. To complicate matters: I would have had til Thursday, but the district cancelled it for 'Parent- Teacher days because the elementary schools are having one'- which means I lost an extra day for deadline!
Someone pray for me....cuz Halifax is in 48 days or so, and I need to practice everyday as well.
"....You are my Strong Tower, a Shelter over me, Beautiful and Mighty, Everlasting King
You are my Strong Tower, a Fortress when I'm weak, Your Name is true and holy, and Your Face is all I see...." -Kutless
Friday, March 7, 2008
Hunt for the books of history
So i started this contest today at booksofhistory.com where there is a search for a 'book of history'. Based on Ted Dekker's books, this ARG is extremely enticing. You are searching online for clues on blogs, news sites, and even ebay and craigslist. So far I've found the first two codes, and I think thats all I can unlock until the next contact, but until then,all I can do is theorize on the boards.... AAAHHH! This thing is too complex!
Actually, if anyone has any clues, please comment or message me.
Actually, if anyone has any clues, please comment or message me.
Sunday, February 10, 2008
SNOW STORM!!!! We're supposed to get 10 centimetres over the course of today, and we even cancelled church tonight. WHY DIDN'T IT WAIT UNTIL TOMORROW??? So now, instead of a snow day, we'll be just getting ready for school Tuesday after just a long weekend rather than a snow day added on! Don't you hate that? Anyways, I have a job now, at BK in Houlton. It's pretty sweet, especially the half-off employee discount! Plus, I get paid Thursdays, which also means right before Youth Xplosion in Fredericton this weekend. YES!! Can't wait! Tim Rutledge and Johnathan Dean are coming up this year, and it's gonna be awesome!
I've also found that upright bass is an amazing instrument. I started playing electric about two years ago, and this past school year began learning upright. I love it!!! The tone is so much sweeter than any electric, and its just plain fun as well. Since I'm the only one playing the school's, and it wasn't needed for any band stuff, Mr. Davidson let me bring it home to practice. I need to buy a new electric though before I get my own upright, which i am planning on sooner or later. There is nothing like the sound of an upright playing jazz.....
I've also found that upright bass is an amazing instrument. I started playing electric about two years ago, and this past school year began learning upright. I love it!!! The tone is so much sweeter than any electric, and its just plain fun as well. Since I'm the only one playing the school's, and it wasn't needed for any band stuff, Mr. Davidson let me bring it home to practice. I need to buy a new electric though before I get my own upright, which i am planning on sooner or later. There is nothing like the sound of an upright playing jazz.....
Friday, November 16, 2007
Macbeth Essay
Well, Language Arts 112 is officially done with Macbeth on Monday! YES!!!! I found this play to be an excellent piece of writing, and loved reading it, but, like most teenagers, hated having to do the work the teacher gave us around it.....Can I get an amen? Anyway, i had to write an essay of 800 to 1000 words, and (YES!!!!) got a 47 of 50 on it! That's an A, right? Since I'm so glad for my mark, i felt like posting it on here, so you could read it...not that I'm bragging, but I really like this essay lol :) By the way, I have corrected one or two things since i got my grade...I missed one contraction which is no longer there, etc. There are 1354 words as well... The indentation messed up copying from Word, so i had to double space between paragraphs. Sorry.
This essay is titled: Bloody Hands: A Study Into the Guilt of Macbeth (by me, of course!)
Long regarded as one of Shakespeare’s darkest plays, Macbeth is a pinnacle of tragedy. Even the very name brings to mind visions of dark, stormy nights with murderous, chilling screams echoing through the highlands’ air. Any study of Macbeth revolves around this one question: who is actually responsible for the deaths of Duncan, Banquo, and Macduff’s wife, son, and servants, and the eventual suicide of Lady Macbeth? Does the blame fully fall on Macbeth and his wife, or on the “weird sisters” (4.1.148) for provoking an unstable man? If it is Lady Macbeth’s fault, is the guilt of murder the main catalyst in her suicide? Even with all the evidence against these others, Macbeth appears as the most liable suspect.
“I go, and it is done; the bell invites me. / Hear it not, Duncan, for it is a knell / That summons thee to heaven, or to hell” (2.1.69-71). With this final proof of resolve, Macbeth creeps into Duncan’s bedchamber to slay the king. Is Macbeth responsible for the further bloodshed in the play? True, he has already proven that he is able to kill in battle, as a soldier has told us that:
Disdaining fortune, with his brandish’d steel,
Which smoked with bloody execution,
Like valour’s minion carved out his passage
Till he [Macbeth] faced the slave;
Which never shook hands, nor bade farewell to him,
Till he unseam’d him from navel to the chaps,
And fix’d his head upon our battlements.
(1.2.19-25)
Amazing, is it not, that this same warrior felt that he had “no spur / To prick the sides of [his] intent, but only / Vaulting ambition, which o’erleaps itself / and falls on the other” (1.7.25-28). After killing Duncan and ascending to the throne, Macbeth soon begins to realize the consequence of kingship: the ever-present fear of betrayal. He sees Banquo, his old friend, as a threat to his power, and hires two murderers to ambush Banquo as he rides to the palace. He gives the two tales of how Banquo has subjected them to harsh times, while he is living in splendor. The two are hardened and attack Banquo “strik[ing] out the light” (3.3.27) and giving him “twenty trenched gashes in his head” (3.4.31). We again see Macbeth fall from his position of valour, evil though it is, in fear, as he states:
It will have blood; they say blood will have blood.
Stones have been known to move, and trees to speak;
Augures and understood relations have
By magot-pies and choughs and rooks brought forth
The secret’st man of blood. What is the night?
(Macbeth, 3.4.151-155)
In scene two of act four, Macbeth sends the murderers to have Macduff’s “wife, children, servants, all / that could be found” (4.3.245,246) “surprised…[and]…savagely slaughter’d” (4.3.236,237), for no apparent reason other than anger at the fact that Macduff has fled Scotland and rejected his rule.
Macbeth is preparing for battle and hears a scream from the women’s quarters of the castle. He immediately sends his armour-bearer, who brings back word of Lady Macbeth’s suicide. Macbeth does not mourn or seek solace, but declares that “ She should have died hereafter; / There would have been time for such a word…Out, out brief candle! / Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player…And then is heard no more:” (5.5.19-26). How could this man say such a thing of the woman that could very well be responsible for his rise to power, if not the bloodshed? It is without doubt that if not for Lady Macbeth, the entire state of chaos, murder, and darkness in Scotland might have been averted; and yet, does this make her responsible?
I have given suck, and know
How tender ‘tis to love the babe that milks me:
I would, while it was smiling in my face,
Have pluck’d my nipple from his boneless gums,
And dash’d the brains out, had I so sworn
As you have done to this.
(1.7.59-64)
It is quite apparent that Lady Macbeth is extremely resolute, and has more determination than her husband to kill Duncan. She reads Macbeth’s letter in scene five of act one, and immediately begins planning her husband’s (or is it hers) takeover by submitting herself to “ murdering ministers” (1.5.51) and asking them to “…fill [her], from the crown to toe, top-full / of direst cruelty! Make thick [her] blood…And take [her] milk for gall…wherever in your sightless substances / You wait on nature’s mischief!” (1.5.45-46,51-53). She lays her plan to have Duncan’s guards drunk, and succeeds, but cannot bring herself to kill the sleeping king, as “ he...resembled [her] father as he slept” (2.2.16,17).
She goes on encouraging her husband as he tells her of his distrust of Banquo. She follows his plan without any apparent doubts, and after time passes, seems to be cracking under the pressure and guilt-which, if she were not responsible, should not happen, right? She begins to sleepwalk and hallucinate, and “has spoke what she should not,” (5.1.44). She mumbles that “the thane of Fife [Macduff] had a wife, where is she / now?” (5.1.39), which implies her knowledge and possible backing or responsibility, perhaps, of the massacre at Macduff’s castle. What would motivate her to support the murder of Lady Macduff: jealousy, a grudge, or a sensation of threat to her power now that Macduff has fled Scotland? After all, Lady Macduff has related that “Yes, he [Macduff] is dead” in her eyes (4.2.45) and claims to be able to “buy [herself] twenty at any market” (4.2.58) Perhaps she has simply supported her husband, as evidenced in her next words. “ Look not so pale: I tell you yet again, Banquo’s buried; / He cannot come out on’s grave.” (5.1.58,59). However the case, the madness eventually drove her to the state where she “by self and violent hands / Took off her life,” (5.9.42,43). Does this prove her guilt, or shame at her husband’s failure? It is an unanswered question into the mind of one disturbed woman.
As for the “weird sisters” (4.1.148), do they partake in the responsibility for the temporary downfall of Scotland? At the start of the play, they are already waiting for Macbeth, who is in battle. They disappear, only to reappear when Macbeth and Banquo enter the dark moor.
All hail, Macbeth! Hail to thee, thane of Glamis!
All hail, Macbeth! Hail to thee, thane of
Cawdor!
All hail, Macbeth! That shalt be king hereafter.
(1.3.50-53)
Banquo asks for his own prophecy, and is told that he is “Lesser than Macbeth, and greater. / Not so happy, yet much happier. / Thou shalt get kings, though thou be none:” (1.3.68-70). After this, the witches disappear again. They reappear in a secluded area, performing a spell while waiting for counsel from Hecate, their apparent overseer.
And at the pit of Acheron
Meet me I’ the morning; thither he
Will come to know his destiny…
…Shall draw him on to his confusion:
He shall spurn fate, scorn death, and bear
His hopes ‘bove wisdom, grace, and fear:
And you all know security
Is mortals’ chiefest enemy.
(3.5.16-33)
When Macbeth comes to them for advice, the witches remark that “something wicked this way comes.” (4.1.45). They have been composing a potion of unknown use, until out of it appears the three “apparitions”, who speak strange words to Macbeth. After this, they disappear, never to be seen again.
All in all, the guilt must rest upon someone. Lady Macbeth would not have sought to assist her husband in the killing if it had not been for the letter. Macbeth would not have murdered Duncan without motivation, for he was his kinsman and ruler. The witches, however, seem to have had no motivation except for by their superiors, and are given a background of causing despair. Macbeth must then be guilty, for even with a prophecy of sovereignty, he could have sought other ways to ascend to the throne. He planned the subsequent murders of Banquo, Lady Macduff, her son, and servants, and the attempt on Fleance’s life. He hired the men who performed the murders, and thus is responsible for their actions. He bears the guilt, and condemns himself by his own actions.
This essay is titled: Bloody Hands: A Study Into the Guilt of Macbeth (by me, of course!)
Long regarded as one of Shakespeare’s darkest plays, Macbeth is a pinnacle of tragedy. Even the very name brings to mind visions of dark, stormy nights with murderous, chilling screams echoing through the highlands’ air. Any study of Macbeth revolves around this one question: who is actually responsible for the deaths of Duncan, Banquo, and Macduff’s wife, son, and servants, and the eventual suicide of Lady Macbeth? Does the blame fully fall on Macbeth and his wife, or on the “weird sisters” (4.1.148) for provoking an unstable man? If it is Lady Macbeth’s fault, is the guilt of murder the main catalyst in her suicide? Even with all the evidence against these others, Macbeth appears as the most liable suspect.
“I go, and it is done; the bell invites me. / Hear it not, Duncan, for it is a knell / That summons thee to heaven, or to hell” (2.1.69-71). With this final proof of resolve, Macbeth creeps into Duncan’s bedchamber to slay the king. Is Macbeth responsible for the further bloodshed in the play? True, he has already proven that he is able to kill in battle, as a soldier has told us that:
Disdaining fortune, with his brandish’d steel,
Which smoked with bloody execution,
Like valour’s minion carved out his passage
Till he [Macbeth] faced the slave;
Which never shook hands, nor bade farewell to him,
Till he unseam’d him from navel to the chaps,
And fix’d his head upon our battlements.
(1.2.19-25)
Amazing, is it not, that this same warrior felt that he had “no spur / To prick the sides of [his] intent, but only / Vaulting ambition, which o’erleaps itself / and falls on the other” (1.7.25-28). After killing Duncan and ascending to the throne, Macbeth soon begins to realize the consequence of kingship: the ever-present fear of betrayal. He sees Banquo, his old friend, as a threat to his power, and hires two murderers to ambush Banquo as he rides to the palace. He gives the two tales of how Banquo has subjected them to harsh times, while he is living in splendor. The two are hardened and attack Banquo “strik[ing] out the light” (3.3.27) and giving him “twenty trenched gashes in his head” (3.4.31). We again see Macbeth fall from his position of valour, evil though it is, in fear, as he states:
It will have blood; they say blood will have blood.
Stones have been known to move, and trees to speak;
Augures and understood relations have
By magot-pies and choughs and rooks brought forth
The secret’st man of blood. What is the night?
(Macbeth, 3.4.151-155)
In scene two of act four, Macbeth sends the murderers to have Macduff’s “wife, children, servants, all / that could be found” (4.3.245,246) “surprised…[and]…savagely slaughter’d” (4.3.236,237), for no apparent reason other than anger at the fact that Macduff has fled Scotland and rejected his rule.
Macbeth is preparing for battle and hears a scream from the women’s quarters of the castle. He immediately sends his armour-bearer, who brings back word of Lady Macbeth’s suicide. Macbeth does not mourn or seek solace, but declares that “ She should have died hereafter; / There would have been time for such a word…Out, out brief candle! / Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player…And then is heard no more:” (5.5.19-26). How could this man say such a thing of the woman that could very well be responsible for his rise to power, if not the bloodshed? It is without doubt that if not for Lady Macbeth, the entire state of chaos, murder, and darkness in Scotland might have been averted; and yet, does this make her responsible?
I have given suck, and know
How tender ‘tis to love the babe that milks me:
I would, while it was smiling in my face,
Have pluck’d my nipple from his boneless gums,
And dash’d the brains out, had I so sworn
As you have done to this.
(1.7.59-64)
It is quite apparent that Lady Macbeth is extremely resolute, and has more determination than her husband to kill Duncan. She reads Macbeth’s letter in scene five of act one, and immediately begins planning her husband’s (or is it hers) takeover by submitting herself to “ murdering ministers” (1.5.51) and asking them to “…fill [her], from the crown to toe, top-full / of direst cruelty! Make thick [her] blood…And take [her] milk for gall…wherever in your sightless substances / You wait on nature’s mischief!” (1.5.45-46,51-53). She lays her plan to have Duncan’s guards drunk, and succeeds, but cannot bring herself to kill the sleeping king, as “ he...resembled [her] father as he slept” (2.2.16,17).
She goes on encouraging her husband as he tells her of his distrust of Banquo. She follows his plan without any apparent doubts, and after time passes, seems to be cracking under the pressure and guilt-which, if she were not responsible, should not happen, right? She begins to sleepwalk and hallucinate, and “has spoke what she should not,” (5.1.44). She mumbles that “the thane of Fife [Macduff] had a wife, where is she / now?” (5.1.39), which implies her knowledge and possible backing or responsibility, perhaps, of the massacre at Macduff’s castle. What would motivate her to support the murder of Lady Macduff: jealousy, a grudge, or a sensation of threat to her power now that Macduff has fled Scotland? After all, Lady Macduff has related that “Yes, he [Macduff] is dead” in her eyes (4.2.45) and claims to be able to “buy [herself] twenty at any market” (4.2.58) Perhaps she has simply supported her husband, as evidenced in her next words. “ Look not so pale: I tell you yet again, Banquo’s buried; / He cannot come out on’s grave.” (5.1.58,59). However the case, the madness eventually drove her to the state where she “by self and violent hands / Took off her life,” (5.9.42,43). Does this prove her guilt, or shame at her husband’s failure? It is an unanswered question into the mind of one disturbed woman.
As for the “weird sisters” (4.1.148), do they partake in the responsibility for the temporary downfall of Scotland? At the start of the play, they are already waiting for Macbeth, who is in battle. They disappear, only to reappear when Macbeth and Banquo enter the dark moor.
All hail, Macbeth! Hail to thee, thane of Glamis!
All hail, Macbeth! Hail to thee, thane of
Cawdor!
All hail, Macbeth! That shalt be king hereafter.
(1.3.50-53)
Banquo asks for his own prophecy, and is told that he is “Lesser than Macbeth, and greater. / Not so happy, yet much happier. / Thou shalt get kings, though thou be none:” (1.3.68-70). After this, the witches disappear again. They reappear in a secluded area, performing a spell while waiting for counsel from Hecate, their apparent overseer.
And at the pit of Acheron
Meet me I’ the morning; thither he
Will come to know his destiny…
…Shall draw him on to his confusion:
He shall spurn fate, scorn death, and bear
His hopes ‘bove wisdom, grace, and fear:
And you all know security
Is mortals’ chiefest enemy.
(3.5.16-33)
When Macbeth comes to them for advice, the witches remark that “something wicked this way comes.” (4.1.45). They have been composing a potion of unknown use, until out of it appears the three “apparitions”, who speak strange words to Macbeth. After this, they disappear, never to be seen again.
All in all, the guilt must rest upon someone. Lady Macbeth would not have sought to assist her husband in the killing if it had not been for the letter. Macbeth would not have murdered Duncan without motivation, for he was his kinsman and ruler. The witches, however, seem to have had no motivation except for by their superiors, and are given a background of causing despair. Macbeth must then be guilty, for even with a prophecy of sovereignty, he could have sought other ways to ascend to the throne. He planned the subsequent murders of Banquo, Lady Macduff, her son, and servants, and the attempt on Fleance’s life. He hired the men who performed the murders, and thus is responsible for their actions. He bears the guilt, and condemns himself by his own actions.
Saturday, October 20, 2007
First Post
I've been a lot of places: Nigeria, Ghana, Burkina Faso, Niger, Cote D'Ivoire, France, the good ol' United States of America, and now Canada. I've seen many things while traveling, and I've been impacted numerous times by the way God has led my family and I all the way to Woodstock, New Brunswick. It meant leaving family and friends again, just like when we went to France or Africa. The change can either affect you positively or negatively, and you must choose which you will allow. Either way, you will still be there; you won't be magically transported back to your former home. I've definitely learned that by now, if nothing else.
A new school, a new church, a new set of friends: one must adapt. Although it is painful to leave, it can become a source of strength. It is hard to understand, but we are in the will of God. I can see now the need of Woodstock for a pastor, which they didn't have until we moved here, and a family willing to be used of God to reach a hurting community. In my school, I am torn to see how many rely on drugs or alcohol, on social acceptance (of which they are willing to do anything) to feel like they belong. I see that they are searching, always searching for a love. We are the ones who must show them the love of God, who died for them, just as he died for every soul on the other side of the world as well.
This is my first post; I do not know how regularly I will add a new one, but I will try to keep it updated. Please pray for Woodstock. They say it is in the "Bible belt" of the area, but I see so many leaving their churches for the things of the world, which is in such a sad state.
I had the opportunity this summer to go to North Carolina for North American Youth Congress 2007. The sight of 18-20,000 young people with one thing in their minds, one purpose in their hearts-to advance the kingdom of God- is so powerful. I really believe that this generation can make a difference, but we cannot allow the pressures of the secular world to overtake us. The messages of the media are all pleasure-based and self-centered, a distraction from the will of God that have us reach out to a hurting, dying world.
With prayer,
Jeff Sully
A new school, a new church, a new set of friends: one must adapt. Although it is painful to leave, it can become a source of strength. It is hard to understand, but we are in the will of God. I can see now the need of Woodstock for a pastor, which they didn't have until we moved here, and a family willing to be used of God to reach a hurting community. In my school, I am torn to see how many rely on drugs or alcohol, on social acceptance (of which they are willing to do anything) to feel like they belong. I see that they are searching, always searching for a love. We are the ones who must show them the love of God, who died for them, just as he died for every soul on the other side of the world as well.
This is my first post; I do not know how regularly I will add a new one, but I will try to keep it updated. Please pray for Woodstock. They say it is in the "Bible belt" of the area, but I see so many leaving their churches for the things of the world, which is in such a sad state.
I had the opportunity this summer to go to North Carolina for North American Youth Congress 2007. The sight of 18-20,000 young people with one thing in their minds, one purpose in their hearts-to advance the kingdom of God- is so powerful. I really believe that this generation can make a difference, but we cannot allow the pressures of the secular world to overtake us. The messages of the media are all pleasure-based and self-centered, a distraction from the will of God that have us reach out to a hurting, dying world.
With prayer,
Jeff Sully
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
