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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
شتاء
يعني يكون هو بتعب عمره ويصحح كل كلمة ويراجعها هو يبغى شي سهل وواضح .. بنعطيه شي وواضح بالضبط مثل وضوح اللي جابه لنا :hahahahahah: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
صاااااااادقه والله :(204):
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بناااات
اللي ما اختبرت نثر سنه ثالث ميد تيرم بكرا الامتحان الساعه 11 كلاس 0_9 ممر 65 المعتذرررات يعني :rose: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
:33_asmilies-com:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
لاني للحين ماشريتها ولااطلعت عليها ولااعرف شسالفه :(269): يعني يكفي اطبعها له من الموقع وخلاص :hhheeeart4: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات صباح الخير وصباح سعيد عليكم ابي اسالكم
شنو صار بمحاضرة الترجمه والنثر كنت تعبانه وغبت وغير هيك الاسبوع الجاي اهي اخر محاضرات اليهم او في بعد الي بعده ؟ نبي ننام الي بعده في بيوتنا خلاص :019: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات ...:53: اختبار النقد بكره ...:eek: شنو نسوي ...!!:icon9: يليت كل وحده كاتبه شي تكتبه هنا لما يكتمل الكلام ..:(204): انا ماحضرت هالمحاضره للاسف مااقدر افيدكم بشي...:sm5: وموفقين ..:106: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
^
:(107)::(107)::(107)::(107)::(107)::(107)::(107):: (107)::(107)::(107)::(107)::(107)::(107)::(107)::( 107)::(107)::(107)::(107): :icon9: ؟ |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
[QUOTE=Diamond brooch;6254493]
بنات ...:53: اختبار النقد بكره ...:eek: شنو نسوي ...!!:icon9: يليت كل وحده كاتبه شي تكتبه هنا لما يكتمل الكلام ..:(204): انا ماحضرت هالمحاضره للاسف مااقدر افيدكم بشي...:sm5: وموفقين ..:106: [/QU ممكن كتبه لك بكره إذا هو عندك الثلاثاء ...بس إذا تبينه اليوم صعبه لأني عندي أختبار صععب وبزي حتى النخاع :007: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
تسلمين حبيبتي ..:004:
بس بكره اختباري للاسف ...:24_asmilies-com: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
مافيه تفريغ نقد ؟ :41jg:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
مااتوقع لو في بين من زمان..:58545:
الله يستر ...:sm18: بنات احد يقدر يحط الرسائل اللي شرحتها الدكتوره :biggrin: نسيت اشتري الملزمه اخر صفحتين... بليززززززز ..:bawling: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
Keat Negative capability is the state of creative obsession that allows one to transcend any intellectual or social constraints and to perceive and to think more than any ……………… position of human nature allows. It describes the capacity of human beings to reject the constrains of a close system or context, and to both experience phenomenon free from any bonds or restriction, as well as to assert their well and individuality upon their activity. It means being capable of eliminating once own personality in order imaginatively to enter into that of another person or in extreme cases an animal or an object. It is the ability to see beauty that are seen as negative and experience everything, good or bad. According to Keat, true poetry is no explained, but carefully absurd as reveled through the senses. The poet's job is to be receptive to a different type of reality, one in which uncertainties and mysteries cannot be resolved or explained. The art of negative capability is a way of writing into the unknown. The reward is poetry that resonates at a deeper level with the reader, and surprises even the poet. ^ وصلني هذا الشي عالايميل من بنت جزاها الله خير :004: الكلام اللي تنقله الدكتوره في المحاضره طبعا ما ادري اذا كامل او لا لاني ما حضرت المحاضره ان شاء الله يفيدكم :rose: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
What do you expect for criticism's quiz tomorrow? |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات احد يشرح الرسايل بالعربي :bawling:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات وين احصل ملزمه النثر رحت الكوبي سنتر اليوم ماحصلتها من وين جبتوها :000:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
^
ملزمه شنو حبيبتي تتكلم عن ايش الملزمه ..؟؟:000: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اتوقع التفريغ ناقص ع كلام الاخت جميله ...:58545:
الأسبوع الجآي , كويز من 5 درجآت بدل البرزنتيشن على الـ Letters حقين Keats هي 6 رسآئل آهم النقآط : Adams' dream = imagination هذا بالرساله الأولى Negative capability بالرساله الثانيه Characteristics of poet بنات احد عنده الملزمه ينسخ لنا الرسائل بليز ...:Looking_anim: والنقطه الاخيره يشرحها Characteristics of poet :sm1: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
الجزء الثاني للنقد الي نزلتها الدكتوره يمنى
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات من وين ذاكرتو للنقد اللي عندها معلومات ياليت تفيدني ؟؟؟:Cry111:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
وآلله الملتقى مآارضى ينفتح لي :icon9: عآدتس تبينها ؟ آسويلها سكآن ؟ ولا حصلتيها ؟ |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات الله يوفقكم احد يسوي سكان الملزمه حقت كيت بليز عندي امتحان الثلاثا الله يوفق الجميع واللي كاتبه المحاضرة بعد ياليت تحطها لنا لان عندي ناقص كثييير ومشكورين
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
سويت حركه , مآتوقعت بطلع معهآ بنتيجه :58545: كتبت أول سطر تملينا اياه بقوقل , وطلع البقيه :biggrin: آتمنيت لو الموقع منفتح لي كآن أقولكم بدري ~ http://www.keatsian.co.uk/keatsian-ideas.htm نفس الكلام اللي هنا : - Negative Capability is being capable of eliminating one's own personality, in order imaginatively to enter into that of another person, or, in extreme cases, an animal or an object.' Negative capability is 1. the ability to engage. To see beauty in things that are seen as negative, and experience everything; good or bad. You can get inspiration from everything. بعدين آخر برقرآف بهالصفحه http://elizabethharrington.suite101....bility-a132361 اللي يبدأ بـ According to Keats . بعدين اللي كتبته لا تغرك ضحكتي . |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
تسوين خير حبيبتي لو تحطينها هون ..:060: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
2 مرفق
آتفضلوآ :rose:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
يعطيك العافيه حبيبتي ...:rose:
فكتي ازمه ..>> من زمان انتظرك :icon120: ربي يوفقك وييسر امرك ...:004: سؤال Characteristics of poet كيف حلها اذا تقدرين تساعدني ..:060: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
3 مرفق
السلام عليكم فووفوو ..
سووري ع التأخير .. و هذا محضرات العربي جبتها لك كامله بس بقى محاضرت ألأسبوع الجاي أو ماناخذها بكتبها وبنزلها هوون .. طبعا" أول أربع محضرات كاتبتهم ومنزلتهم البنت الأموره ( May be not ) الله يعطيها العافيه . بس أنا نزلتهم مع باقي المحاضرتين (5 + 6 ) عشان مايضيعوون في الصفحات <:hhheeeart4: فقط .... :(284): أنا اليوووم أوووووووووووووف ... ياحلوو النووم بس :019: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
لله يفتح عليك جميله ولاتغرك والله فكيتو ازمه ربي يوفقكم :rose:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
ها بنات بشرون الي امتحن نقد السوم كيف الاسئلة شنو جاكم تتوقعون تعيد السؤال او يجينا سؤال ثاني :000:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
يـ مسسسسآإء آلعـسل يـ صبآإيـآإ .. آول شي حبيـت آقول للـي يسآلون عن آلنـقد آلكويز سهل و روعـه بـ آلحيل كآن سؤآلهآإ .. Beauty is truth, truth is beauty "Explain this to Keats’s letters you have study" طبعآ تبي بشكل بسيط لآنهآ قآلت آنه شورت آنسر يعني تجيبين آلزبده من كل رسآيله ولآوزعـت آورآق حنـآ كتبنـآه في ورق وسلمنـآهآ :oao: .. بـ آلتوفيق للي آمتحـنو وربـي يوفـق آلي مآ متحنـو :119: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
خوآتـي آلغآليآت .. آغلبـنآ مآ يعرف بعض وحتـى آلي يعـرفون بعض آلكـل جآلس يسآعد بآللي عنـده وهذآ مآ يضيع عند ربـي يكفـي آلنيه حتـى لو مآ عطيتـي شي .. آللي بجـد ضآيقنـي لمـآ تشتركين مع بنت نحسبهآ وآلله حسيبهـآ ثقـه وتوفينهـآ حقهـآ ووقت آلآمتحـآن مآتجيك آلآورآق و لآحتـى تحرص آنهـآ تسآل هذآ شي للآسف شي يخجل ولآكنت آتوقعه آنآه وآلشأهد ربـي مآهمتنـي آلآورآق لآن ربـي يسخر لعبيـده وآنآه آقولهآ ربـي يجزآهآ آلجنه صآحبه آلآورآق آلي ذآكرتهآ ويسخر لهآ عبيـده لآنهـآ مآ بخلـت علينـآ بمجهـودهآ .. آذآ آنآ آشتركت مآيمنع آرسلهآ للي آعرفهم هذي آورآقـي وآنآ حره بس آنهآ مآ تجينـي هذآ بحد ذآته صدمه ولآ رآح آدعي ربـي يحآسب كل عبد ونيته لآنه آلوحيـد آعلم بـ آلنوآيـآ لكـن آني آسمع آنهـآ وصلت بنآت وآلسآعه 4 آلفجر آليوم هل يعقل يعنـي بـ آلعقل آن آلتفريغ توه يخلـص طيب آقلهآ آرسل للي عندي آرقآمهن آخبرهـن آلبعض نآيم وآلبعض مسكين آسآسآ مآ فتحه غآسل يده " مآ آدري هل مآفيه حس آخوه ؟ عجزت آبرر لـ صآحبه آلموقف لكـن نقول يمكـن آنشغلـت ونعذرهـآ لكـن لو حطت نفسهآ بـ مكآني آو مكـآن آلبقيـه كآن جلست تخآنق آو مدري وش بيصير بـ آلضبط لكن مآ دعيت آكتفيت بآلقنآعه آلي دآخلـي آن كلـن محآسب وآترك آلعبيـد للخآلق :119: ؟ بنـآت وربـي مو شي هيـن آذآ في دآخلكـم شي من آلآنآنيه آو آللآمبآلآه في غيرتس يبـي ينجح مو بس آنتـي " آحب لغيـرك مآ تحبـه لنفـسك " ؟ هذآ فيض من غيض وآنآه مـ آعـم لكـن ربـي شآهد آنـه آحزنـي آن حنـآ نآصل لهآلدرجه ولآ قدرت آهمش آلموضوع آلبعض بيرى آنه مآله دآعي و ... و ... لكـن حنـآ خـوآت ولآ حكيـت آلآ لآنـي آحبكـم فـ آلله :119: .. يـ جعل ربـي يجزى كلـن بنيتـه ، و بآلتـوفيييييق :rose: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بــ . . ـــآإكـ .. بـ آلنسبـه للي قآلت آن رآبط آلسبآرك نوت مآ فتح معهـآ تجرب هذآ .. http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/returnofnative/quiz.html وهذي آلآسئله من آلـ كليف نوتس .. http://www.cliffsnotes.com/study_guide/literature/return-of-the-native/study-help/quiz.html لآن آسآسآ آلآختبـآر كلـه تشويسز .. :004: :rose: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
مشكورين بناااااااااااااااااااااااااات
ربي يوفقكم ويسهل عليكم...:060: ويدوم هالتعاون بينا يآرب...:10111: maziona B7t shoog تتوقعون بنات هالاختيارات تكفي..:(107): انا بصراحه فاتتني محاضرتين ..:Looking_anim: بس اللي اعرفه اشرحت عن الكاتب واتوقع مايدخل معنا لانها قالت بس النوفل.. اما الباقي يليت احد يقول النقاط اللي تكلمت عنها علشان ناخذ فكره ع الاقل ...:060: وموفقين..:rose: اللهم علمني ماجهلت وذكرني مانسيت وزني علما ..:(204): |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
أنا أحس أنهم يكفون ..
دام أنهآ قآلت ان الأمتحان كله تشويسز .. وأنه مابياخذ منك 10 دقآيق .. .. بس أبي وحده تكون فآهمه هالروآيه .. تقول لنا لو بالمختصر والعربي وش قصتها .. لآن مو معقوله أجلس أقرأ 400 ورقه بيوم ..! عنوني أبيها :cheese: .. إلي عندها معلومه لو بسيطه عن هالروآيه بليز لآ تبخل .. ومي توو ألحين بحآول أقرأ بالسمري والشخصيآت وبرجع أقول إلي فهمته .. :oao: ؟ موفقين .. |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
كم عليه الامتحان بكره بنآت ؟
النثر أقصد .. |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
^
سبقتني جايه احط النك:biggrin: http://www.bookrags.com/studyguide-r...free-quiz.html بس الاجابات مو متوفره لازم تسجيل وماضبط معي ..:139: اللي قدرت تحصل الحل تحطه هون بليز...:060: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
[QUOTE=Maybe Not;6263829]كم عليه الامتحان بكره بنآت ؟
خمس درجات فقط ..:tongue: والحل بـ 10 او 5 دقايق ...:wink: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
مسا الخير اللي امتحنو نقد بشرو
والروايه ما لها ترجمه بالمكتبات |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
بس سجلي وخلاص |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
هذآ النقد .. النثر مادري أذا لها ترجمة .. بس ياليت والله ! دامه من 5 درجات هههههه .. مالنا إلآ سبآرك نوت وشلته .. ثآنكسسس ع هالمعلومه .!! هالاسبوع بنفجر من الامتحانات انا .. زين ان جا هذآ كنوع من أنواع الراحه :hahahahahah:.. موفقييين .. |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بناااات في احد ما سلم الاسايمنت حق الللنقوستكس كنت غايبه
وما فكرتها اخر لكتشر وش الحل:mh12: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات احد يعرف ايش جابت بالنثر لكلاس السبت؟
اذا من كويزات النت والا لا؟ |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اختبار الكويز لكلاسات السبت بيكون الاسبوع الجاي ..،
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
السلام علييييييكم :119:يارب كان الامتحان حلو وسهل عليكم ييااااابعدي انتي يابحة شووق:004: كلنا صار لنا نفس الشي لكن شووفي صدقيني اللي بنيتها شي موزين ولاتبي الخيير ماتنجح ولاتتووفق ولو نجحت ماسلمت من دعاوي البنات ولو انتس كبرتي بعيني ماصرتي مثلهاو تمنيتي لها الخير وهذا اللي نتمناه للكل :007:بعدين تعااااالي ضيعتي علي الافكار وشو له تقوومين وانا احل الاختبار:(177):
:(284):لبببببى روووحتس ياااعسل |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
LECTURE SEVEN
Thomas hardy born in 1840 ,towards the mid Victorian period ,dieing in 1928 we will see that he has witnessed almost have of the Victorian period and three decades of the modern time , so you can see that there is some sort of transition , even later on when he started writing towards the 70s ,80s, and 90s and some of his books were published at the beginning of the 20th c. So these kinds of writers who come in a transitional stages usually witness t he change from one period to the other. E said something about George Eliot that she was revolutionary in trying to bring about changes in the Victorian novel, now we know Thomas hardy today as a novelist and a poet , he was a short story writer , we will look at his fiction mainly his major works , because he started as a poet and actually he was an architect , and later on following the advice of one of his friends George martin a Victorian novelist he started to write novels. At the very beginning his novels were not very successful and he did not succeed in getting them published , they were burnt but not by him but by someone who was looking after his property after his death , that is why we do not have any trace of his early novels only the later ones. He was born in Dorchester south of England , where people lived in a place that is so lavish with its natural beauty and it is beside the sea too , so again you can see similarities in the birth place and the environment in which the two novelists we are discussing have grown up and the beautiful nature that sparkled the imagination of the two novelists . He had a very informal education as a child and mainly it was his mother who was very careful about the type of books her son had ,because he was living in the suburbs so he did not get a really good education at that time ,. But she was careful to introduce him to the world of culture and knowledge and books of literature that she made him read , so she had a major influence over him and we can always remember Thomas hardy's mother for her influence in the creativity of Thomas hardy at that time. As for his father he was a local builder , he was not a very educated man. At his 20s he moved in 1862 to London and there he got the chance for a proper education , he became a student at King's Collage in London, to study architecture and this had much influence on his writings, he succeeded in getting a degree in architecture. He have had two marriages the first one was to a woman who he was in love with and it was not a very long marriage because his wife died early and it seems that the sense of loss and grief over her death has resulted a number of poems written to show his sense of grief over his wife ,so yet it was a tragic experience it was very nourishing for him as a writer and as a poet. As for his second marriage he married his secretary , who was 40 years younger than himself , this was an unusual thing during the Victorian time, the marriage was successful, his wife Emma was careful in collecting his notes, articles and journals in a biography so we are thankful to Emma for doing that because of the incident of burning his house so without Emma we couldn't have had anything to read and learn from Thomas hardy if it was not for her. Thomas hardy belongs to the realist school like George Eliot his, his characters were most depicted from his society and the topics he choose were again related to society , the changes in peoples' morals and traditions and how he felt about these traditions and the way he puts them in his novels in a very realistic style ,so we can consider him as a realist ,like George Eliot there was many objectionable things about his views the experiences and the type of novels , maybe he has not done something as outrageous as George Eliot by living with a married man , but he has expressed freely and openly his views of religion and society and how society change the morals that Victorians were holding on to ,he has expressed his criticism about these things very frankly in his novels, that is why his novels were not favorably received by his readers and critics of that time. One of the things that he has expressed freely is his view of religion , we can see in his works that his faith was there it was intact , yet we have certain views about the traditional Christian view of god , which we as Muslims look at and criticize . People did not understand why he is criticizing there morals, traditions and believes and that affected his reputation as a writer , he was not received very well . He wrote about supernatural elements ,which is obvious in his works as we will see in The Return of The Native ex: people having superstitions about magic , full moon , witches and witchcraft . We said that there is something very distinctive about his character that he usually explore tragic characters , traveling in their passions and in the same time he shows character traveling against social circumstances. So theme of passion was not something to be discussed in the literature and novels of the Victorian period that is why his works were not received very well. The new generation of younger writers started to appreciate Thomas hardy we can mention 2 very important and influential novelists D.H Lawrence and Reginualمش متأكدة من الاسم هذا are just examples of the writers who came later and appreciated Thomas hardy's works and they have mentioned hardy's work as a great influence on their own novels. Another theme that we are going to see is fate, and how fate plays a major role in the lives of his characters , which something that Thomas hardy is interested in showing us , he shows very important moments in the lives of his characters where they have to make very important decisions, in other words characters trapped or countering cross roads where they have to decide to left or right , straight or backwards, these are the types of characters that hardy likes to portray. One of the major elements of his works is the setting , he has used settings in a very special way to make it highly influential ex: like the mill and the floss they had their influence on the lives of the people living at that part of England. When we talk about Thomas hardy we see this done in a very high degree, now again similar to George Eliot he has chosen the area on which he was born and brought up which is Dorchester south of England a very beautiful area in terms of natural beauty he has chosen Dorchester to be the setting and the background of many of his novels all his major novels were set in Dorchester , but he does not give the real name of the area he uses the name Wessex , which is a fictional setting of his works , Wessex is not only the background or the place of the action , it really determines so many things about the choices that the characters make the decisions that they have to make in their lives so in his works you will find very accurate description you will see when you read the of the novel that it is mainly description of the heaths. If we appreciate the works of Thomas hardy as a novelist we can say that despite the criticism of the themes , characters that he used to portray he became a celebrity around the 1900s with highly successful novels yet he felt disgust out of public reception towards his latest works and he gave up writing fiction all together . So he began as a poet not as a novelist following the recommendation of the novelists he started writing his first novels but they were not published the publishers did not like the topics and the themes and the type of characters he portrays, but he managed to publish his later works almost 5 or 6 major novels and after these novels he decided to stop writing fiction because he felt that it is useless to continue writing and having the same unfavorable reception from critics and public readers , but nowadays Thomas hardy is appreciated . If we come to talk about the major titles of his novels ex. Far From The Madding Crowd , you can see Wessex this fictional setting. In Jude The Obscure which was published in 1895 it was not received well but in a very negative outcry from the Victorian public , it was known as Jude the obscene it was nicknamed by that because of the free and open sense of love and sex and sense of passion which are seen in all of his major novelsTess of the d'Urbervilles (1891) it really attracted criticism because the protagonist was a fallen woman, at first it was refused to be published but later on he managed to get it published. It seems that Thomas hardy was really upset because people did not understand that he has a moral to convey through his depiction of a fallen woman, even sinners have some good in them, this is the nature of human beings , so he wanted people to understand that we shouldn't really condemn people and give strict and rigid judgments on them, we should look really deep inside to find goodness were ever we may find it. So although she was a fallen woman he described her as a pure woman, showing that she has some aspects of goodness inside her that people did not see , they only see her as a sinner. Both Jude The Obscure and Tess of the d'Urbervilles received many criticism upon publication because the examination of the fallen woman ,scenes of love and sex ,class system and that was a recurrent topic in his novels, and some views about religion ex. He said that marriage should be dissolvable, that it should come to an end as soon as it becomes a cruelty to the other party , such views shocked Victorian readers in Christianity they do not allow divorce at all if you are married you are stuck with that person for life. Critics gave some of his characters the description of being immoral , they did not really look at the purpose of drawing such characters, all of the points that we have discussed we can put them under the title of social constraints , we can also see the society versus the individual , when an individual wants to achieve something , ex. Like in the return of the native she wants to achieve her inspirations, but her society did not allow her to do that , this reminds us of Maggie Tulliver so you see the similarities between the 2 works . The 7th of May is the anniversary of the publication of one of Thomas hardy's novels so that is why hardies society is making some sort of seminar in celebrating this anniversary next Saturday . The setting is in Wessex but the action of the return of the native took place in a heath called Egdon, some critics feel that the setting is so important in the return of the native that they make the setting one of the major characters in the novel, you will see this name in the character list of the novel , the setting is a major factor in the novel , an actor playing a great role in the lives of the people living in that area , in what way ??? You will see different reactions to the setting , some characters like the protagonist Eustacia she does not want to live in the heath , she feels that it is restraining her she wants the best chance to get out of there , on the contrary we find Clym the main character in the novel having had some time away from Egdon heath and we see him at the beginning of the novel coming back to the heath from Paris after getting an education and going through trading and after becoming rich, when he returns back to the heath he feels a sense of belonging and a sense of yearning that he wants to stay there forever, so you see the difference In reaction some people feel that they belong there and some want to get out of there, the heath is restricting them it is not allowing them to find their dreams so they want to leave it. In one of the quotations of the protagonist she tells her husband later on when she marries ,she tells him I have a very hungry imagination and the heath is making me starve . Your assignment for this week is to write about the importance of Egdon Heath in the return of the native. So this is a summary of both characters and plot because you will not understand the plot unless you understand who the major characters are and what are their relations to each other ..you can read more in the internet. To start we have Egdon heath as an important actor in the return of the native,Eustacia is she the female protagonist in the novel and she is described as being sensual person she really follows her passion she searches for love but she is continuously dissatisfied with the people there and it seems that she has a bad reputation there , because of her relationships with men. One of the characters that Eustacia looks at as a rival is Thomasin another female who is very traditional ,blond , typical Victorian young woman , that so many male characters want to marry, both of them live in Egdon heath. Damon Wildeve , he has a relationship with Eustacia though he has proposed to Thomasin, so you can see the complicated relationship and in the opening of the novel you will see that he is way ahead in getting married to Thomasin but on the wedding day something happens and they find out that some of the papers are missing , so they cannot really go on with the wedding and this gives him another chance to go to Eustacia and ask her to marry him so we can see that he is not in love with Thomasin though he proposed to marry her. Mrs.Yeobrightis Thomasin's aunt, she is also the mother of Clym Yeobright whom Eustacia is to marry, he is the gentleman coming from Paris, educated , handsome and rich , when he returns to the heath, he sees how the people are living in superstition , he decides to become a teacher and educate them. Diggory Venn , his job is to put the print or the mark on the sheep as the cattle belonging to a certain person , so that is a lob that is common in such places, he is in love with Thomasin and he has proposed to her , but she has rejected his proposal , he continues to love her throughout the novel, and he helps her to marry the man she loves, eventually when the man she loves dies at the end he marries her. Damon Wildeve has proposed to Eustacia but though she loves him she believes that he is not suitable for her because of her wild dreams of leaving the heath, she feels that he is inferior she wants someone better, that is why when Clym comes back she feels that he is the suitable person for her that will take her out of the heath and will make her achieve her dreams , and she sees him as her chance of leaving the heath and going to Paris. Wildeve eventually marries after the complications of the papers , her aunt advises her not to marry him because she could see that he is not really in love with Thomasine and gossip in the heath says that he is still in love with Eustacia. What about Eustacia the protagonist , whom does she marry??? She marries Clym under the hope that he is going to take her to Paris, he promises her that maybe after a while he might take her to Paris, he tells her that Paris is not as fascinating as she thinks it is, something happened so had to stay in the heath , she did not fulfill her dream of going to Paris, and there were gossip about her and Damon, the village accused her as a witch because of her superstition and her influence on the young men in the heath and you can see some of the practices of witchcraft and how do they punish her , so this is the end of the supernatural that is seen in the novel. These are the major details of the novel, the title says the return of the native, who returns ??? Clym= he is the native of the heath who returns after spending some time in Paris. Like the mill on the floss you can see that the novel is devided onto many parts and chapters , this happens with many Victorian novels because of the publication that was available at that time , many Victorian novels were first serialized in magazines in weekly chapters then later on they are published as books or novels, writing in parts defiantly affects the writers writings , it affects its plot , its depiction of the characters , when you put the parts together it will be a very long series, and the publishers in order to keep readers following the series and reading they ad a lot of suspense by adding lots of subplots, so to keep the suspense the writer would end that part in a very important event , that would guarantee that the readers suspense would be high so that they will continue to read the other installments usually this is referred to in literature as a cliffhanger. هذي ملزززمه من العاام للبرووز ان شاء اللله تفيدكم |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
Quote 1: "The sea changed, the fields changed, the rivers, the villages, and the people changed, yet Egdon remained." Book 1, Chapter 1, pg. 3The setting is the isolated, desolate, wild land called Egdon Heath on a cold November evening. Nighttime brings the heath to life, awakens possibilities for its inhabitants. The people of the heath live and work comfortably here, even though it is overgrown and obscure, untouched for ages except by the wide road that now travels its length Quote 2: Wildeve asks Eustacia if he should marry Thomasin; he declares, "I wish Tamsie were not such a confoundedly good little woman so that I could be faithful to you without injuring a worthy person." Part 1, Chapter 9, pg. 64Diggory Venn has been in love with Thomasin Yeobright since two years ago, when he was still in the dairy trade. He reads a letter she had written him back then, when he'd proposed to her and she had gently refused, because her aunt did not approve of his low class. Thomasin is the reason he changed occupations and is now a reddleman. Although he does not see Thomasin when traveling around the heath, selling reddle, he takes pleasure in the fact that she is nearby. He is proud that Thomasin has entrusted him with bringing her home. Although he does not believe Wildeve's feelings to be honest, Venn wants Thomasin to be happy even if her happiness means marriage to Wildeve.In this quotation you notice the importance of the setting, so in any quotation mentioning Egdon heath you will have to talk about the importance of the setting because it has a major role in the novel to the extent that some critics regard it as a major character , in discussing the setting we are going to discuss three major points: the setting plays a major role in the lives of the characters ,and you give examples. The characters of the novel are devided in to two groups , those who like living in Egdon heath and others who want to leave Egdon heath , Egdon heath as a simple of fate . There is the theme of change , everything changes except the heath it is like it is it does not change as if the writer trying to say that time is changing and developing but we should stick to our past. Now that he knows that Eustacia is the cause of Wildeve's not marrying Thomasin, he considers her an enemy to Thomasin. He decides to spy on Eustacia and Wildeve at their secret meeting place and eavesdrops on their conversation. Wildeve asks Eustacia if he should marry Thomasin, He did not marry Thomasin, he says, because of their invalid license and because she had run away; he also hints that Thomasin's aunt is another good reason for marring Thomasin. Eustacia, who wants him to say it was her who swayed Wildeve from Tomasin, declares that he will always love her more than Thomasin and will always want to marry her. Wildeve agrees, expressing both of their desires to leave the heath forever. They both abhor the heath, and its mournful and lonely landscape. Quote 9: Mrs. Yeobright asks Johnny Nunsuch to tell his mother that he had seen a "broken-hearted woman cast off by her son." Book 4, Chapter 6, pg. 220Mrs. Yeobright is heading home in the hot sun, feeling utterly devastated and betrayed by her own son. She believes Clym to have refused her, as she knows that Clym was inside the house and assumes that he allowed Eustacia to shut her out. Johnny Nunsuch joins Mrs. Yeobright, who wonders why she looks so exhausted and sad. Johnny waits with her for a while, bringing her water and waiting until he becomes impatient and leaves. Mrs. Yeobright begins her walk alone, walking slowly until she is in too much pain from the heat and the length of her journey to walk and has to sit down on a soft spot to rest. The situation : Wildeve asks Eustacia if he should marry Thomasin, in a quotation like this you identify the characters especially if it is a direct speech , you identify the speaker and the addressee , who is speaking to whom and about what ?? can you identify these 3 things??? Wildeve talking to Eustacia about Thomasin, the situation is : Wildeve wants to marry Thomasin though he is in love with Eustacia, there is the theme of guilt and remorse because he wants to marry Thomasin though he is in love with Eustacia + the theme of morality if Thomasine was not a good person it would have been easy for Wildeve to cheat on her + theme of love and passion , both characters Wildeve and Eustacia follow their passions and they fall in love with each other in a society which represents moral Victorian society they are doing something that their society do not approve of . Quote 3: "She had loved him partly because he was exceptional in this scene, partly because she had determined to love him, chiefly because she was in desperate need of loving somebody after wearying of Wildeve." Book 2, Chapter 6, pg. 108 Identify the characters: Wildeve, Eustacia and Clym. Identify the situation : about love and passion , you will mention Eustacia's scheme marrying Clym to leave Egdon heath she was looking for someone worthy of her not Wildeve but Clym. Themes : self center + influence of the setting from what kind of group is she loving the heath or wanting to leave it . she did not go to Paris her dream because he did not intend to leave, he betrayed her. Quote 4: Clym's stay in Egdon has made him realize that his business in Paris is the "idlest, vainestill , most effeminate business that a man could be put to." Book 3, Chapter 1, pg. 130 It is mainly about Clym and when you mention his reaction towards the heath we will meet the point of reaction of different characters towards the heath ¸you will refer to the title of the novel , when he returns to the heath after being away for sometime in Paris he has a sense of longing and he has a sense of responsibility he sees the people there living in superstition , he feels being an educated man he has the responsibility to educate them and change them. He becomes a preacher but achieving his aim meant that he would not achieve his wife's aim of leaving the heath. Quote 5: Clym speaks with passion, "I would give it up and try to follow some rational occupation among the people I knew best, and to whom I could be of most use." Book 3, Chapter 1, pg. 130 You will say the same thing he is expressing his sense of responsibility towards Egdon heath so this quotation is a completion of the previous quotation Quote 6: It is painfully evident to Eustacia that although Clym is embarrassed of the heathmen, he cares very much for his home--"It is the most exhilarating, and strengthening, and soothing. I would rather live on these hills than anywhere else in the world." Book 3, Chapter 3, pg. 142 Major theme : the reaction of the characters towards the heath Clym is an example of those characters who love the heath unlike Eustacia , Clym loves the heath he wants to stay there , the influence of the heath on him is great but the heath does not react to him the same way and he at the end remains as a sad man. Quote 7: "Though I should like Paris, I love you for yourself alone. To be your wife and live in Paris would be heaven to me; but I would rather live with you in a hermitage here than not be yours at all." Book 3, Chapter 4, pg. 152 Every night, he goes to meet Eustacia on Rainbarrow, and one night she voices her fears that Mrs. Yeobright will influence Clym against her. Clym assures her that his mother will not stop him from seeing her, as she knows that they are romantically involved. Clym proposes to Eustacia; she asks for time to think it over and begs him to talk about Paris. She tells him that she will marry him if he will take her back to Paris. Clym is destined to do far greater things with his life than staying on the heath, Eustacia believes, although Clym disagrees. He has vowed to stay on the heath and become a schoolteacher. Eustacia suddenly decides to marry him, as she does not believe his education scheme will pan out. As the two of them walk back to Mistover, Clym thinks about three obstacles to his future happiness: his mother's trust in him, his plan to become a schoolteacher, and Eustacia's own happiness. Here Eustacia is speaking to Clym about staying in the heath and about their love this is before their marriage , is she being really true when she say I love you more…. She was not really revealing her true feelings , the theme of love , marriage , appearance versus reality , the readers are not going to believe the character here because she is not expressing her true intentions. Quote 8: Eustacia explodes, "If I had known then what I know now, that I should be living in this wild heath a month after my marriage, I--I should have thought twice before agreeing." Book 4, Chapter 1, pg. 185Mrs. Yeobright decides to see Eustacia about the guineas. Upon hearing Mrs. Yeobright's decision to visit Eustacia, Christian finally admits to Mrs. Yeobright that Wildeve had won the money, both Thomasin's and Clym's share. Christian suggests that perhaps Wildeve will give half the guineas to Eustacia. Fueled by this new suggestion, Mrs. Yeobright goes to see her daughter-in-law. Mrs. Yeobright bluntly asks Eustacia if Wildeve had given her money as a gift; Eustacia vehemently denies that she has the money and is deeply insulted at the implication that Clym needs guarding against her and that she is committing adultery with Wildeve. Eustacia then accuses Mrs. Yeobright of having hated her all this time for no reason. When Eustacia furiously proclaims that she married beneath her, Mrs. Yeobright hotly retorts that her son's lineage is far better than Eustacia's. Eustacia explodes, The two women part in silence and anger. She is contradicting herself and we take it as an expression of herself same themes of the previous quotation, now she married Clym and she stays in the heath and she does not go to Paris because also he is almost blinded . = example of coincidence . Clym wakes up, having dreamt that that he had taken Eustacia to his mother's house but they could not get in, despite his mother's crying for help. As a result of the dream, he resolves that he must see his mother as soon as possible. Quote 10: Eustacia hears Johnny Nunsuch cry out, "She said I was to say that I had seed her, and she was a broken-hearted woman and cast off by her son." Book 4, Chapter 8, pg. 232When Wildeve appears suddenly, Eustacia congratulates him on his fortune. Wildeve tells her that he meant to sound indifferent about his inheritance, because Clym has Eustacia instead of money. Wildeve tells Eustacia of his plans to travel around the world before finally settling in Paris. Mrs. Yeobright speaks about her son she is speaking to Johnny , she is dieing , son mother relationship, mother son relationship , she tells the young boy to tell everybody that she is dieing and that she is very sad that she is not able to speak to her son, she considers herself of being cast of from her son , hardy likes to show his character's sufferings we see failure of characters because of fate and misconceptions of situations , she had a misconception that her son and daughter in law does not want her which was not true because Eustacia thought that the knocking would wake Clym that is why she would not open the door and not because she did not want her. They walk further down the heath until they see that a hut is occupied. Seeing that Clym and his mother are inside, Eustacia asks Wildeve to spy on them. At that moment, Mrs. Yeobright is near death. The doctor tells Clym and the villagers that it was the long walk in the heat that has exhausted Mrs. Yeobright's weak heart, although the adder bite does contribute to her suffering. Mrs. Yeobright dies, with Clym and Thomasin weeping. she also hears Clym gasp in surprise and sob. Eustacia does not dare to enter the hut; she feels terribly guilty and remorseful. She feels that she is to blame for Mrs. Yeobright's death, for she had not admitted her mother-in-law into the house. Quote 11: Clym furiously yells at Eustacia, "The day you shut the door against my mother and killed her." Book 5, Chapter 3, pg. 249Clym learns that Mrs. Yeobright was sitting outside Clym's house when Johnny first saw her; that an unknown man entered the house; that Mrs. Yeobright had knocked when she saw Eustacia at the window; that Mrs. Yeobright had left because she was not admitted inside and walked off with Johnny. Clym realizes that Eustacia must have shut out his mother, leading his mother to believe that he didn't want to see her. Johnny here tells everybody what his mother told him to say as if she is revealing the misbehavior of her son and his wife , how does this influence Clym and Eustacia ??? Clym is upset he blames Eustacia for the death of his mother and they are separated and she goes to live with her grandfather. Enraged, Clym returns home the next day and confronts Eustacia, demanding to know the identity of the male visitor she had seen on August 31st. When Eustacia replies that she does not remember dates well, Clym furiously yells at her, دعوواتكم:119:Clym is rampaging, violent, even brutal as he tries to get Eustacia to confess. After he finds an envelope with 'Wildeve' written on it, he mistakenly believes that she is seeing Wildeve. As much as he is outraged and maddened, she defies him by not giving in to his inquiries. She does not admit that the man was Wildeve. She is frustrated and bitter at Clym and almost wishes that he would kill her, to get her out of the heath. Eustacia accuses Clym of deceiving her, and Clym suddenly realizes that she is in so much pain because they have stayed on the heath. Same like the previous he accuses Eustacia of killing his mother, misconception , separation between husband and wife . Quote 12: "She would have to live on as a painful object, isolated, and out of place. She had used to think of the heath alone as an uncongenial spot to be in; she felt it now of the wholeOn the 6th of November, as Eustacia prepares to flee Egdon, she has fleeting memories of Clym that lift her hopes, but she finally decides that he will never want her again. Here it is about Eustacia and the narrator going inside her and telling us how she felt his is an indication of the, the change in the English novel towards being a modern novel ,feelings of misery she has to live isolated especially after separation and because she is not leaving the heath , she wants to leave the world and she achieves that because she dies at the end. Quote 13: Eustacia feels degraded and humiliated that she is fleeing with Wildeve as his mistress: "He's not great enough for me to give myself--he does not suffice for my desire!" Book 5, Chapter 7, pg. 271 Same situation we said before she feels that Wildeve is not suitable for her and even at the end of the novel she thinks that she will elope with Wildeve she has no choice she wants to leave the heath because he offered her leaving the heath but she does not leave the heath. Quote 14: "I have no money to go alone! And if I could, what comfort to me? I must drag on next year, as I have dragged on this year, and the year after that as before. How have I tried and tried to be a splendid woman, and how destiny has been against me! I do not deserve my lot! O, the cruelty of putting me into this ill-conceived world! I was capable of much; but I have been injured and blighted and crushed by things beyond my control! O, how hard it is of Heaven to devise such tortures for me, who have done no harm to Heaven at all!" Book 5, Chapter 7, pg. 271Eustacia sets out to meet Wildeve, discovering that it has begun to rain. She stops at Rainbarrow to think; she suddenly realizes that she has forgotten to bring money with her. She feels degraded and humiliated that she is fleeing with Wildeve as his mistress: Feeling that the whole world is against her, she bemoans her fate as a woman destined for cruelty from the moment she was born. She realizes the futility of her fate: This quotation concentrates on reflecting the feelings of the characters, she feels that she has been a victim of faith , you will talk about Eustacia and her relation to the heath and that it is by coincidence she is living in the heath . Tomas hardy likes to show his characters struggling towards achieving something and maybe most of the time failing in achieving their plans. Quote 15: "To her there were not, as to Eustacia, demons in the air, and malice in every bush and bough. The drops which lashed her face were not scorpions, but prosy rain; Egdon in the mass was no monster whatever, but impersonal open ground. Her fears of the place where rational, her dislikes of its worst moods reasonable. At this time it was in her view a windy, wet place, in which a person might experience much discomfort, lose the path without care, and possibly catch cold." Book 5, Chapter 8, pg. 278Thomasin cannot stand being in the house alone when she fears that there may be trouble brewing. Wrapping the baby warmly, she leaves the house in a great hurry. She is anxious to know what happened with her husband and Eustacia. The storm does not frighten her, nor does the landscape of the heath disturb her as it does Eustacia: We are talking about Thomasine and the contrast between our major theme the reaction towards the heath and Eustacia's , Eustacia hates the heath so if something happens to her it’s the demons of the heath but Thomasine is the opposite, Eustacia dies as a result of her attitude towards the heath , so is hardy against Eustacia ??? in some aspects yes but in our situation no he wants to keep England's history as a part of his identity = against change. Quote 16: Clym believes that he has done an unforgivable deed and his regret is that, "... for what I have done no man or law can punish me." Book 5, Chapter 9, pg. 289Clym confides to Venn that he killed Eustacia by driving her away from him and wishes that he were dead instead. No matter how much Venn comforts him, Clym believes that he has done an unforgivable deed and his regret is that, "for what I have done no man or law can punish me" He told Eustacia that Paris is not fascinating as she thinks it is he tricked her he made her form a bad conception of Paris , theme of regret and how he manipulated Eustacia . Fate 6: It is fate that both Wildeve and Mrs. Yeobright call on Clym and Eustacia at the same time, and it is fate that Clym is asleep when the visitors call. Mrs. Yeobright believes that Eustacia ignores her for her other visitor, Mrs. Yeobright believes that her son has cast her off, and Eustacia believes that Clym will awaken and let his mother in. Fate 7: Clym dreams that his mother is crying for him to help her inside her house, but in the dream, she cannot allow him in her house. His dream makes him resolve to reconcile with his mother, but it also symbolizes the trouble and turmoil his mother really is in. Clym's dream comes too late, for he never gets the chance to reconcile with her before she dies. : Clym writes Eustacia a letter begging her to return to him - but he sends the letter too late. Eustacia does not see the letter before she leaves to flee with Wildeve. If she had, she might have stayed on the heath to be with Clym. Fate 13: Clym is devastated by the deaths of his wife and mother, believing that he drove them to their deaths. He thinks that fate is cruel to him, for taking his life in this direction, but he manages to calm himself by taking walks on the heath. Being on the heath comforts him, and he is thankful that he is where he belongs. |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
صآدقه وربي , وصلت الفجر , والأختبآر 9 كآن يمدي يعطون البنآت اللي دفعوا معهم !! هي كلهآ محآضره وحده ~ بس no comment وآللي توصل المبلغ عشآن لا آظلمهآ , مسكينه كآنت يآئسه ونآيمه ولا درت الا متأخر :004: آلمهم , والأهم . . كملو ملآزمكم بنفسكم لعد تعتمدون على فلآنه وعلآنه ! يذلّونآ بفلوسنآ :139: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
يوستيسيا فتاة بنت 18 سنه شايفه نفسها ، تمبى تتزوج وآحد غني الي يقدر يطلعها برا الهيث .. توميسن و ولديف كان المفروض انهم يتزوجوا بس في يوم زوآجهم أكتشفوا ان الودينغ ليسنغ تبعهم انفالد .. فتنكسل الزوآج .. طبعاً ما أحد يعرف هل هالشي كان مُخطط له من ولديف أو انه كان عن طريق الخطأ.. - يوستيسيا فرحت بهالخبر لأنها تفكـر ان ولديف يحبها أكثر من أنه يحب توميسن .. - عمة توميسن مع فين حآولوا انهم يرجعوا علاقة توميسن بـ ولديف ويخلوهم يتزوجوا من جديد حفاظاً عليها من كلام النـآس .. - ولديف تقدم لـ يوستيسيا لكنها رفضت بحجة انها تفكر نفسها انها احسن من توميسن وكيف تتزوج من وآحد تقدم لـ توميسن وماتقدم لها قبل ! (:Looking_anim: سايكو هههه ) - بعدين يوستيسيا شافت ليها شوفة ثانيه :biggrin: الا هو كليم يوبرايت ولد مسس يوبرايت ويصير ولد عم يوستيسا وحبيبها السابق :10111: .. عجبها مرررآآ لأنه يدير شغل مرآ كويس في باريس وثاني شي انها وأخيراً بتقدر تطلع من الهيث .. علشان تضمن انه مايحب توميسن من جديد أنضمت مع مسس يوبراين وفين في انهم يخلوا توميسن تتزوج ولديف من جديد ونجحت في ذالك وتزوجوا الاثنين .. - يوستيسيا و كلم حبوا بعض وتزوجوا رغم معارضه مسس يوبراين للزواج لانها تعتقد ان يوستيسيا بنيه موو زينه .. بعدهااا آمال يوستيسيا تحطمت لآن كلم قرر انه يضل في الهيث ويعمل كـ مدرس للأطفال الي مايقدروا يلتحقوا بالمدآارس الخاصه .. وبسبب انه كان يقرأ كثير في الليل بصره ضعف فبالتالي مابيقدر يعمل كمدرس فاشتغل ك فروز كتيغ ويوستيسا كانت مره متفشله من شغل زوجها .. - يوستيسيا تهاوشت مع أم زوجها على سالفه فلوس :cheese: ( مافهمت السالفه بالضبط ).. العلاقه توترت بينهم وهالسالفه زآدت من رغبة يوستيسيا انها تنفصل عن زوجها .. - في يوم من الايام قررت مسس يوبراين انها تزور أبنها ... رآاحت وطقت الباب ويوستيسيا مافتحت ليها الباب لان كان عندها ضيف والضيف هو ( ولديف) .. -مسس يوبراين تعبت نفسيتها ومرضت ومن ثم ماتت :139: لما ماتت الام جلس كلم يعاتب نفسه :sm1: بعدين اكتشف من وآحد أن أمه ماتت بسبب انها رآحت تزورهم في الكوتج ويوستيسيا مافتحت لها الباب لان كان معها ولديف .. بعدها يوستيسيا طلبت الطلاق وتطلقت ورجعت بيت جدها وقعدت تخطط مع ولديف انه يهرب معاها :24_asmilies-com: - توميسن كانت شاكه انه زوجها مقرر انه يهرب مع يوستيسا فرآحت لـ كلم تطلب منه يساعدها في منعهم من الهروب :10111: ورآح معاهم فين .. - لما فين وتوميسن وكلم رآحوا وراهم ، اكتشفوا ان يوستيستا طاحت في السد .. كلم حاول يساعدها مع ولديف ولكن ولديف مع يوستيسيا غرقوا ووماتوااااااا ونجا كلم بس .. - بعدها بسنه توميسن وفين تزوجوآ بينما كلم أصبح وحيداً وصار يعمل كـ وآعظ ديني ..، --------------- انااا من قروب السبت بس كلمت دكتوووره ليلى اني أختبر معـآآكم بكررا ووافقت :10111: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنآت النقد اليوم جآتكم تسع وعطتكم الكويز وخلاص .. أو بدت من 8 وعطتكم محاضره ساعه وعالتسعه الكويز ؟؟:(107)::(107): >>ماأبي أجي الصبح عالفاضي :biggrin:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بس امتحان خلصنا محاضرات ..
من 9 يبدأ .. |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
مشكووووره ياحكايييا الووورد :119:جزاك الله خييير
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
سؤال يطرح نفسه !!!
انا استثنائي وعلي دراما مع بتول من وين نذاكر المنهج ؟؟؟ من ملازم العام او فيه تفريغ جديد لهالسنة ؟؟؟ |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
من تفريغ العام ... مافيه لا تسجيل ولا تفريغ جديد .. ذااكرنا من حق العام وان شاءالله اننا جبنا كويس با الميد |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات ايش القطع الجديده الي نزلتها دكتوره سلوى بالفيس بوك الي لازم نترجمها لاسبوع الجاي
؟؟؟ |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
مشكووووووووووووووووووووورة هتاااااااااااااااااان يالبى قلبتس:004:
ربي يوقك ويسعدك ان شاء الله |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
maziona diamond brooch شتآء عمـري تسسسلم يمنآكـم ع روآبط آلكويزز للـ نثـر:106: .. مع آنهـآ جآبت شي من آللي ذآكرته بسبآرك نوت ولآ كليف نوت بس وآلله آلعآلم آنهـآ من آلملزمه آللي حكـت عنهـآ آلثلآثآء بعد آلكويز :icon9:.. لكـن آلعوض فـ آلفآينـل آن شآء آلله ربـي يسهل علينـآ جـميع ..:biggrin: خيتـو .. Miss.LoLo آحمد آبرآهيـم آلدكتور متعآون حـيل خذي آيميله وآذآ مآلقيتيه آبشري به آعطيتس آيآه وآنتـي حآكيه بجديه وآن شآء آلله يآخذه :119:.. وتسسسلمين ع تفريغ آلنـقد :004: .. حيآتـي آستفآق آلجرح لبـى آلعرب بس :53:.. صدقـتي و يـ جعل ربي مآيضيع تعبنآ جميع :119: وتسسسلمين ع تفريغ آلبروز آنفدى خشيمتسس بس :tongue: وخلي آلجرح يمسي وش آللي آستفآق هههههههههههههههههه << بتندبج :41jg::biggrin: غلآتـيJamilah ~♥ آصـلآ هذآ آللي بيصير مآ عآد بيدنآ شي كل وحده تحآول تعآون آلثآنيه عشآن نغطي آلنآقص وآلله معنـآ :004: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات متى امتحان المعتذرات للنقد؟؟
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات مين سجلت بالؤتمـــــــــر الطلابي الي بالمريديان يقولون في بنت تطاولت على الدكاتره هل هذا الكلام صحيح؟
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اختبار النقد للمعتذرات الاسبوع الجاي الاثنين
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
^^
طيب الساعه كم بيك،ن الامتحان؟:(107): |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
الساعه 9 ..
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
ثانكــــــــــس :004:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات اللي امتحنو نثر كيف كانت الاسئله من تجربتكم تنصحونا من وين نذاكر واش الملزمه اللي تقولون عنها
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
^
ذاكري المواقع الكويز اللي بالنت :Looking_anim: وقراءه عامه عن الروايه مثل المقدمه وكذا..:Looking_anim: وقراءه الملزمه اللي نزلتها ..:Looking_anim: انا ماشفنها الى اللحين بس يمكن تفيدك:58545: في اليوم الاختبار :007: شفناا اسئله مو موجوده من النت:eek: فاتوقع يا هي كتبتها :(107): او طاحت ع موقع ثاني مانعرفه ..:(107): وموفقه حبيبتي ..:106: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بناااااااااات حصه ..
قروب الاحد ..:sm12: قالت لكم ان في كويز ...؟؟:mh12: لان قروب السبت امتحنو !...:(269): وقروب السبت ..:sm12: خلصتم ولا باقي؟ ..:(107): وفي شي نحضره للمحاضره؟ ..:(107): بليززززز..:004: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
صباح الخير بنات
عندي سؤال النثر تذاكرونه من ملازم العام او هالسنه ؟ |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
زي ايش الاسئله اللي مو موجودة في النت ؟؟ :mh12: اذا تذكرين شي منها اسدحيلنا اياه الله لا يهينك و الملزمة ذي وش سالفتها وينها فيه :Looking_anim: فجر والا الكوبي سنتر ؟؟ |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
امممممممممم مااذكر الا سؤال تاريخ الروايه متى والمكان
وفي سؤال بعد بس نسيت ..:(107): وبعض الاسئله منوعه في من سبارك نوت ومن شمبو جابت سؤال الاقتباس من قال هالكلام ..:064: كل المواقع اللي هنا طلعوها البنات راح تستفيدن منها ان شاء الله:004: وبعضها مثل ماقلت لك ياهي كتبتها او من موقع مانعرفه..:sm5: الملازم قالت موجوده في الكوبي سنتر ..:Looking_anim: اتمنى لك التوفيقك ..:106: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات ايش المواقع الي جابت منها الدكتوره ليلى كوز النثر غير سبارك نوت ابي الموقع الجديد الي جابت منه مين تعرف اسمه ؟؟؟
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
ارجعي يالحلوه الصفحات اللي وراء وبتشوفينها ...:(204):
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
طيب بنات مين عندها الملزمه اللي قالت عليها دكتورة ليلى ,,عل الاقل تقول لنا ايش فيها :Cry111:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بناااااااات من وين نذاكر النثرررر
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
[ نقد - يُمنى ]
متعودين معهآ تعطيكم التوتل قبل الفآينل ولا ؟ احد يعرف كيف بتكون اسئله الفآينل ؟ أبي آذآكر من اللحين عندي تعآرض :sm1: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
ماجاوبتوني من وييييين نذاكرنثرر؟!
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
لآ ما قآلت لنا د- يمنى كيف بيكون الفآينل ..
بس اتوقع انو نفس أسلوبها الترم الأول .. كآنت الأسئله كثيره بس أكثرها واضحه .. وجابت لنا كرتكل من قصيدتين سهليين ودارسينهم من قبل .. ونختار واحد ونحله << من 5 فقط كان .. --- أبي أعرف وين مكتب د- سلوى ؟ وكيف نظآم امتحانها بكره ! طآبور وإلآ كيف ! ماحب الطوآبير آنا !! |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بحة شوووق:hahahahahah:الجامعه وعمايلها خاته يستفيق لاما احد بيندبج:41jg:
الله يسهل الاختبااارات يااارب وينجحناااااا |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
ممساءء الخخير
اختبار لغويات مع احمد ابراهيم بكرا؟ للمعتذرات |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اللي يسألون من وين نذاكر للنثر هذا الموقع فيه البلوت وهي شارحه منه ونفس الكلام بالسلايد http://www.bookrags.com/notes/rn/SUM.html
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
الله يسعدك ويووووفقك ي قمررررررر
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
ياليت وحده تقدر تنزل الاجابات حق الكويز هذا
http://www.bookrags.com/studyguide-r...free-quiz.html ضروري بليييييييييييييييييز |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
1)
What do some of the locals notice about Clym? He has spent more time than usual visiting. 2) Who does Clym find? Charley. 3) Why does Mrs. Yeobright say Clym is no longer allowed in her house? (from Book 3) He and Eustacia are getting married 4) How does Mrs. Yeobright feel about Clym's relationship with Eustacia? (from Book 3) She does not approve. 5) <H2 class=text>Why does Wildeve say he cannot attend Eustacia's wedding? (from Book 3) He has to watch the inn. 6) <H2 class=text>What does Clym do when he stops studying? (from Book 4) He becomes a furze-cutter 7) <H2 class=text>Where does Clym go? (from Book 6) Towards Eustacia's home 8) <H2 class=text>Why is Thomasin now attracted to Diggory? (from Book 6 He is no longer stained red 9) <H2 class=text>What does Thomasin tell Clym? (from Book 4 What passed between his mother and his wife. 10) <H2 class=text>Where is Mrs. Yeobright when she hears the news about Clym and Eustacia? (from Book 3) The inn 11) <H2 class=text>Where is Eustacia at midnight? (from Book 5) On her way to meet Damon. 12) <H2 class=text>When are Eustacia and Wildeve's feeling rekindled? (from Book 4) As they dance 13) <H2 class=text>Why are Wildeve's passions for Eustacia renewed? (from Book 3) She belongs to another. 14) <H2 class=text>What does Diggory want to erect? (from Book 6) A maypole 15) What does Clym do one night while he and Eustacia are watching an eclipse? (from Book He proposes to her 16) <H2 class=text>What plan do Eustacia and Wildeve concoct? (from Book 5) For her to leave for Paris 17) Why is Diggory's skin no longer red? (from Book 6) He has left the reddleman business 18) For whom does Mrs. Yeobright feel sorry? (from Book 4 Clym 19) <H2 class=text>Why is Clym hesitant about Thomasin's question? His mother did not approve of Diggory as a match 20) What does Clym do with his new career? (from Book Lecture about moral matters. 21) <H2 class=text>What happens when Thomasin visits Clym? (from She gives him his portion of the inheritance 22) <H2 class=text>Why does Clym blame Eustacia completely for his mother's death? (from Book 5) He is angry 23) Why is Eustacia uncomfortable about joining a group? (from Book 4) She cannot find the woman who invited her 24) <H2 class=text>What does Clym admit to Thomasin? He is still in love with Eustacia 25) Why does Clym join the group to help get the bucket out of Eustacia's well? (from Book 3) He wants to see her هذا حل الموقع اللي ماعرفتوه </H2> </H2></H2></H2> ودعواتكم لي اني اننجح والله يوفقكم </H2> </H2></H2></H2></H2></H2></H2></H2></H2> </H2></H2> |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
هذا نفس السلايز حق مس ليلى
Plot Summary Book First: the Three Women This novel opens with a sweeping view of the Egdon Heath countryside, providing descriptions of the landscape and some sense of its history. In the next chapter, an old man — later identified as Eustacia Vye's grandfather — meets a red dye salesman, known as a reddleman. They briefly discuss Thomasin's marriage, and the old man infers from the reddleman that the wedding has been postponed. In town, Thomasin meets her aunt and explains that her wedding was called off because of a mix-up with the license. They go to the tavern and receive assurance from Damon Wildeve, her fiancé, that he will marry Thomasin in a day or two. When the locals show up to sing to the newlyweds, they are forced to pretend that the marriage occurred. After everyone leaves that night, Wildeve sees a bonfire up on the hill nearby the Vye house. Eustacia Vye, the exotic beauty who lives there, has heard from her grandfather that the marriage did not take place. She lit the fire, which was not unusual because many people celebrated Guy Fawkes Day with bonfires. Yet this was the same way she had attracted Wildeve the previous year; he had come to her house and they had begun a passionate affair. Confused, he goes to Eustacia again. After his visit, Wildeve decides that he does not want to marry Thomasin after all. Diggory Venn, the reddleman, has been in love with Thomasin since childhood. He finds out about Eustacia and tries to get her to leave town. Thomasin's aunt, Mrs. Yeobright, tells Wildeve her niece is thinking of marrying Venn. When she hears this news, Eustacia decides that Wildeve is not as attractive as she had thought; she begins to have doubts about her relationship with him. Meanwhile, news comes that Mrs. Yeobright's son, Clym, has returned from Paris. Book Second: the Arrival Clym's arrival is important news to the locals, who remember what a bright, promising boy he was. Bored with Wildeve, Eustacia becomes infatuated with Clym. On the night that the drama troupe is going to put on a Christmas play, Eustacia finally meets Clym, although she keeps her identity hidden. She is so preoccupied with Clym that she fails to show up to tell Wildeve whether she will run off with him or not. Diggory Venn pressures her to leave Wildeve alone, and so she writes Wildeve a letter saying that she will not be involved with him anymore. As soon as Venn admits that he is not engaged to Thomasin, Wildeve rushes to her house and sets a wedding date. When Thomasin and Wildeve get married, the witness to their wedding is Eustacia Vye — she just happenes to be in the churchyard when a witness is needed. Book Third: the Fascination Clym's Christmas holiday at home turns into an extended stay. He considers his life in the diamond trade in Paris to be superficial, and formulates a plan to open a school in the heath where he can teach the poor children who otherwise would get no education. He finally meets Eustacia, and is impressed with her beauty and intelligence. He informs his mother that Eustacia could be a part of his heath school. Yet in fact, his mother doubts that Clym is serious about being a teacher at all. She accuses him of being interested in the young woman romantically. Eustacia does not like his plan to open a local school either; she sees none of the charm of Egdon Heath, and instead wants to go to Paris with him. When Clym proposes, she accepts, thinking that she can change his mind after their marriage. After a fight with his mother, Clym marries Eustacia. In protest, his mother does not even attend. Yet she decides to send a local boy to the wedding with a hundred guineas. On the way, Wildeve dupes the boy into gambling and takes all of the money, which he considers half his anyway; Diggory Venn, who has been following him, gambles with Wildeve and wins the money from him. Book Fourth: the Closed Door Not knowing that the money was meant for Thomasin and Clym, Venn gives it all to Thomasin. Mrs. Yeobright assumes that Wildeve gave the money to Eustacia, his old lover. Mrs. Yeobright and Eustacia have a bitter argument. Studying late into the night to become a schoolmaster, Clym damages his eyes and is told to quit reading for a while. Rather than staying idle, he takes a job as a furze cutter. Being married to a furze cutter is exactly the fate that Eustacia thought she was avoiding by marrying a worldly diamond merchant from Paris. As a result, she is humiliated. Depressed about her life, she goes to a local dance and meets her old flame, Wildeve. He is now rich from an inheritance from a distant relative — just the kind of man she would have wanted to marry. Yet she refuses to get involved with him. Wildeve cannot get Eustacia out of his mind. He goes to her house at night, but Diggory Venn plants traps along the path. To avoid Venn, Wildeve goes to the house one afternoon. That happens to be the afternoon that Mrs. Yeobright has decided to visit Clym and Eustacia's house for the first time. With Clym exhausted and sleeping on the couch, Wildeve arrives and Eustacia invites him into the living room. Just as they decide that they will not have an affair together, Mrs. Yeobright knocks at the door. Eustacia ushers Wildeve to the back door. When she checks the front door, Eustacia finds that Mrs. Yeobright has left. On the way back to her house, Mrs. Yeobright walks with a young boy from the area, Johnny, telling him that her son has broken her heart. He leaves her when she sits down at the side of the trail to rest. That night, after work, Clym decides to visit his mother and settle their differences. He finds her lying on the side of the road, unable to talk. Local people determine that she has been bitten by a snake. They try to cure the bite. Meanwhile, Wildeve has returned to the house to say goodbye to Eustacia. She has him walk her to join Clym and Mrs. Yeobright. They come across the people trying to revive the sick women and Eustacia is afraid to let anyone know she is there. Mrs. Yeobright dies, and the boy she was walking with tells Clym that she said that afternoon that her son had broken her heart. Book Fifth: the Discovery In mourning, Clym is overcome with sorrow and grief until he finds out more about his mother's last day. It is then that he learns that there was another man in the house, and that Eustacia looked out the window at Mrs. Yeobright when she was knocking. He accuses her of having an affair, so she moves back into her grandfather's house. Wildeve comes to her and asks her to go away with him, but she refuses to be unfaithful to Clym. When he asks if there is anything he can do for her, she says he can arrange transportation to the port town of Budmouth, where she can catch a ship. Thomasin convinces Clym to forgive Eustacia, but she has already left. That night, Wildeve tells Thomasin that he has to go away for a while; she sees him take a huge roll of bills, indicating that he is going for a long time. Thomasin tells Clym that she thinks Wildeve and Eustacia are running away together. After he goes to stop them, she goes out into the storm too. Lost, she comes across Diggory Venn's wagon and he helps her in the search. Just as Clym finds Wildeve's coach, they hear a body fall into the river near the dam. Both men jump in to save Eustacia. When Venn arrives he jumps in too, pulling out Clym and Wildeve. Wildeve and Eustacia are dead, but the doctor is able to revive Clym. He blames himself for her death in addition to the death of his mother. Book Sixth: Aftercourses One year later, Clym lives with Thomasin and her daughter in his mother's old house. Diggory Venn has made enough money selling reddle to buy a large dairy farm. He asks Thomasin to marry him, but she thinks that he has become too isolated to be a good husband. Just as Clym is thinking that he should probably ask Thomasin to marry him, she tells him that she would like to marry Venn. Venn and Thomasin marry and Clym becomes a famous preacher. |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
Characters Christian Cantle Christian is a shy, ineffectual young man, nervous around women. Entrusted to go to Clym's house on his wedding day and deliver a gift — one hundred guineas that are to be divided between Clym and Thomasin — Christian loses the money to Wildeve in a game of dice. Grandfer Cantle Grandfer (a title that is local dialect for "Grandfather") represents the lively spirit of the simple country people. At almost seventy, he is eager to dance, sing, joke, and tell exaggerated stories. Charley Charley is a local man who cares for Eustacia. After Eustacia has argued with Clym and gone back to her grandfather's house, Charley takes care of her. He makes a fire for her and feeds her, and when he sees that she has looked too long and sorrowfully at the pistols, he sneaks through a window and takes them away to hide them. Olly Dowden A local woman, Olly is a besom maker. Wildeve takes a bottle of wine to her sick husband one night, using the visit as an excuse when he goes to see Eustacia. Humphrey Humphrey is a furze-cutter. When Clym decides to go into the business of cutting furze, he borrows Humphrey's old equipment. Johnny Nunsuch Johnny is a young boy who lives near Captain Vye's house. At the beginning of the novel, Eu-stacia pays him to tend the bonfire that she uses to signal Wildeve. He sees Wildeve talking to Eustacia and tells Venn about it. Johnny later walks with Mrs. Yeobright after she leaves Clym's cottage at Alderworth. Susan Nunsuch Susan is Johnny's mother. A superstitious woman, she believes that Eustacia is a witch and blames her for her children's illnesses. Diggory Venn Venn is a local man that has been in love with Thomasin since childhood. As such, he frequently works behind the scenes to protect her and assure her happiness. He is called the "reddleman" because he deals in reddle, a dye used by sheep farmers; as a result of handling it, his clothes, skin, and everything he owns are dyed red, giving him a devilish look. It is Venn who brings Thomasin back to town after her marriage to Wildeve is delayed. When he finds out that Wildeve has been seeing Eustacia, Venn pressures him to marry Thomasin; though it means he cannot have Thomasin for himself, it would be the best thing for her reputation. Moreover, he offers to arrange a job for Eustacia so that Wildeve will go back to Thomasin and make her happy. After Wildeve wins the money that Christian was supposed to deliver to Clym and Thomasin, Venn wins it back and gives it to Thomasin. When Wildeve has run off with Eustacia, Venn helps Thomasin find them. It is Venn who saves Clym's life by pulling him out of the water. When he has saved up enough money, Diggory Venn quits the reddle business and buys a dairy farm. Eventually he proposes to Thomasin and they marry. Captain Vye Captain Vye is Eustacia's grandfather. Eustacia Vye Eustacia is local woman and one of the major characters of the novel. She is exotic, beautiful, ambitious, and eager to leave Egdon Heath. Much of the action in this story revolves around the fact that men find Eustacia so unnaturally attractive that there are even rumors of her being a witch. Born and raised in the seaside resort of Budmouth, Eustacia's father was a musician from the island of Corfu, in the Ionian Sea. Eustacia was educated and raised in a cosmopolitan environment, but after her parents died her grandfather brought her to Egdon Heath. She is forced to find the excitement she craves in her relationships with men. She has an affair with Wildeve, but cuts it off after he breaks his engagement to Thomasin. She falls in love with Clym before meeting him, almost solely on the fact that he had a successful career in Paris. While courting, Clym is adamant about the fact that he plans to stay in the country and open a small school, but Eustacia believes she can change his mind later. When Clym takes a job cutting furze, Eustacia resents him. Soon after Eustacia marries, Wildeve inherits a fortune. Eustacia feels she has married the wrong man. This feeling intensifies when Clym accuses her of causing his mother's death. Wildeve offers to take her away, but Eustacia insists on remaining faithful to her wedding vows. She does accept a ride to the port town. Tragically, she drowns in the reservoir, and there is a question whether her death might have been a suicide. Damon Wildeve Wildeve is a wild young man. Engaged to Thomasin, he has a long-standing affair with Eustacia. In fact, he decides to drop Thomasin for Eustacia; instead, Eustacia breaks off their affair and he marries Thomasin. Not surprisingly, he isn't a very good husband. Just as Eustacia is feeling that her marriage to Clym is boring and difficult, Wildeve inherits a fortune; they meet at a dance and find each other exciting all over again. When she separates from Clym, Wildeve offers Eustacia anything that his money can offer, but she declines. At the end of the novel, he drowns in the reservoir trying to save her. Clemson Yeobright The "native" of the novel's title, Clemson (also known as Clym) is a local boy who has returned to Egdon Heath after a successful career in Paris. He is sick of city life, and looks forward to starting a local school. Not long after he returns, he meets Eustacia and marries her. He thinks that Eustacia supports his plan to start a school, and is shocked when he realizes that she doesn't. While studying to be a teacher, Clym damages his eyes. Because he cannot read until they heal, he takes a job cutting furze, which is what most of the local men do for a living. After his mother's death, he feels guilty and blames himself. When he finds out that Eustacia did not let his mother in the house because she was talking with Wildeve, he accuses his wife of having an affair and blames her for his mother's death. After Eustacia's death, he lives with Thomasin and considers marrying her. When he realizes that she will be happy married to Diggory Venn, Clym becomes an open-air preacher and becomes famous by talking to the field workers in language that they understand. Mrs. Yeobright Clym's mother, Mrs. Yeobright, represents conventional Victorian values in the novel. For example, when Wildeve postpones the marriage, she feels that Thomasin's honor is at stake; to save her niece's reputation, she pressures Wildeve to fulfill his commitment. Mrs. Yeobright also objects to her son Clym marrying Eustacia, considering the young woman a "bad girl." She does not attend their wedding, but gives him his inheritance as a present. When she receives no thanks for it, she reaches the conclusion that Wildeve gave the money to Eustacia. When Eustacia denies knowing anything about it, the two women have a fight. To reconcile with her son, Mrs. Yeobright travels to Clym's house, but by mistake, no one lets her in. Mrs. Yeobright walks home feeling that she has been turned away, and on the way a snake bites her. Clym finds her on the path that night, dying. Thomasin Yeobright Thomasin is Clym Yeobright's cousin. She is in love with the charismatic Wildeve and is disappointed when he puts off their marriage. She considers marrying Diggory Venn, the reddleman who is in love with her. Yet she takes his devotion for granted and is still attracted to Wildeve. Eventually she does marry Wildeve, but their union is not a happy one. After her husband dies, she marries Diggory Venn, who has become a wealthy dairy farmer. Media Adaptations Return of the Native was adapted as a television presentation for the Hallmark Hall of Fame series in 1994, starring Clive Owen, Catherine Zeta-Jones, and Joan Plowright. The television movie was directed by Jack Gold and released as a video in 1999 by Hallmark Home Entertainment. Audio Partners Publishing Company has an unabridged, 12 — tape edition of actor Alan Rick-man reading the novel which was produced in 1999. |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
Themes Time The role of time and the effect of its passage are major themes in the novel. As the story spans eighteen months, the landscape of the heath remains unchanged — that consistency is reflected in the people who live on the heath for generation after generation. They are creatures of tradition, following the same wedding rituals, the same harvest rituals, the same holiday traditions and the same folk remedies (such as the traditional cure for an adder's bite) that has been handed down to them. Sometimes traditional beliefs lead to hostility, like the fear of Eustacia Vye being a witch. The characters who encounter difficulty are the ones who are not content to live in rhythm with country life. Most notably, Eustacia is impatient with life on the heath, wishing for the "bustle" of Paris. Wildeve is also bored with life on the heath. When he inherits a large sum of money, he plans to tour the world. Clym is the most divided character in the novel; Eustacia assumes that he is too worldly to settle down in the country, but he is able to appreciate the beauty of the land's timelessness. [W]hen he looked from the heights on his way he could not help indulging in a barbarous satisfaction at observing that, in some of the attempts at reclamation from waste, tillage, after holding on for a year or two, had receded again in despair, the ferns and furze-tufts stubbornly reasserting themselves. Nature Hardy introduces his readers to the landscape of Egdon Heath before introducing any characters. This emphasizes the important role that the natural landscape will play in the story. His description of the natural setting can be taken as symbolic of the people who live there — "neither ghastly, hateful, nor ugly: neither commonplace, unmeaning nor tame; but, like man, slighted and enduring." It can also be taken as a simple acknowledgment that people come to resemble the place where they live. For instance, the extreme heat of the August day when Mrs. Yeobright is turned away from Clym's cottage may be perceived as symbolic of her turmoil. Hardy addresses this issue directly when he has Eustacia wander out into a violent storm on the night of her greatest mental anguish: "Never was harmony more perfect than that between the chaos of her mind and the chaos of the world without." If the people of Egdon Heath seem carefree, it is because they are comfortable in their surroundings. The character who appears to be most in tune with nature's mysteries is Diggory Venn. He does not look like a human because of the red dye that has seeped into his skin and hair, and he does not operate by the rules of human interaction, instead appearing and disappearing mysteriously at night. It is not surprising that in the end he becomes a dairy farmer — making his living with domesticated animals, in harmony with nature but not completely subject to its whims. Conscience The characters in The Return of the Native are motivated by their consciences more than any other driving force. Their attempts to avoid social confrontation are not guided by concern about what others will think, but by what harm they will do to others. This is evident in the opening chapters, with Thomasin's return after her aborted attempt to be married; although eloping is considered shameful, Thomasin and Wildeve are unconcerned about that social stigma, which is quickly forgotten anyway. On the other hand, Wildeve is unwilling to go through with his wedding to Thomasin when he feels that he might end up regretting it and longing for Eustacia. When they do marry, it is not to satisfy the social requirement, but because of Wildeve's failed romantic life. Diggory Venn is driven to assure Thomasin's happiness, passing up opportunities that could benefit him in order to protect her. Telling her about Wildeve's involvement with Eustacia might make her forget Wildeve — thereby clearing the way for him — but Venn cannot hurt her. So he keeps silent. Late in the novel, when Eustacia realizes that Wildeve has become the rich, worldly husband that she always wanted, she does not run away with him because she cannot hurt Clym. At her house, he says that he could not abandon his wife either, but later, when Eustacia is leaving town, he is willing to run away with her, still making sure that Thomasin will receive half of his inheritance. |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
بالنسبه للاسىئله بتكون شبيه بالميد ترم وزياده عليه البراكتيكل الي هو قصيده تجيبها وتسوين عليها براكتيكال هذا اسلوبها من عرفناها :064: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
آستفآق آلجرح .. يـ لبـى :004: خآبرررره آصلآلآ مرآح تتخرجيـن آلآ بعد مآ تتأكد آلجآمعـه آن صآر معتس " حآله نفسيـه " عشآن يتطمنون ع مستقبلـنآ ههههههههههههههههههههه :lllolll:خل نتخررج بس ونعرف نتفآهم معكـم :sm5: > آنتي آنجحي هآلحين ويصير خير :cheese: jamilah ~♥ يـ آلغـلآلآ.. ترى آلنقـد مآهو صعب تجيـب لتس نفس آلي تقوله و حنآ آلترم آلآول جآبت لنآ سؤآل نفسه جآبته فآلميد بس بصيغه ثآنيه بس آسآلتهـآ وآضحه ودآيركت :119:.. يـ جعل ربي يوفقـكم ويسهل آموركـم .. :rose: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بناااات
بكرا في اختبار شعر صصصح؟؟؟! ويش الجزئيه الي داخله معانا؟ |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اقتباس:
+1 |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنااااتز اين انتم ..،
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات في اختبار شعر او لا اني ما ذكر انها قالت ان في امتحان اذكر كانها قالت بنات راح احدد لكم لما احضر المحاضره ؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟ احد يقول شنو سمع ابي اتاكد ان ما في اختبار :icon120: لانه علي اختبار مسرح مقدر مادتين
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات هي ماقالت فيه اختبار
بس بتنكبنا بكرا فاخلونا ندرس بس سوال ايش قصيده بكره ؟؟ |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات الساعه كم كويز الشعر ؟؟:g2: |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
اذكر انها قالت ان بتعطينااا كوييزز .. بعدين بتجمع درجة الكويز الاول مع الي رآح نختبره وتقسمه على اثنين :Looking_anim:
يعني غصب طيب نختببببببببر !!! ماله داعي |
رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
بنات الي عندهم امتحان نقد للمعتذرات وين بيكون نفس الكلاس الي ناخذ فيه المحاضره
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رد: Third year - 6th level - 0ld plan @.@
ايش اسم القصيده الي بكرا؟؟؟؟؟؟؟
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