Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Witness My Fury by Nada Adel Sobhi - Poem



No more will you hurt me,
Trespass over me and my dignity.
No more will you mock me
For now the flames of my raging fury
Shall torment you forever!

Ever heard of “torturing to insanity”?
Oh well,
You'll know it anyway!

You think you are better than me,
More knowledgeable, more bright,
Well you can forget that now,
You can wish you never crossed my path,
Wish I were a mere nightmare,
But all your wishes will be petty ashes.
I am real!
And the pain I will cause you
Will be too real!

I will make your life a living-hell,
Draw you out of the crowd,
Humiliate you, like you did me;
Agony and misery will be your food and drink,
Torture will be your daily routine.
Your suffering will be my utmost pleasure!

I will be everywhere and in everything
You see, hear, feel, eat, drink
And even dream and breathe!
My fury will bind you, burn you,
And when you scream
No one will care, no one will bother.
Your cries will be sucked into oblivion
And forgotten forever!

You think I lie?
That I am not up to my word?

TRY ME!!

I will writhe every single hope out of you.
Your life and your sleep will be an ever-lasting agony!

The pain, the torture,
The misery, the excruciation
That I will inflict upon you
Will be the most devastating,
The most destructive,
The most wrecking,
The most obliterating of all!!

I will haunt your dreams,
Spoil your joy,
Annihilate all your hope,
I will shatter your very existence!

Death would be your saviour,
Your refuge, your relief,
But I will never kill you,
NEVER!

I will torture you till your brain boils,
Till your heart explodes,
Till your soul fades,
And your sanity will be lost
Forever!

You will be a living corpse,
A vampire would have more feeling,
Would know passion
As opposed to you!

Oh, the living-hell
I will put you through;
Death will be a paradise lost
Never to be regained.
Life will be an agonising 
Ever-lasting inferno!

And I,
I am the one to do it ALL!

Sunday, March 17, 2013

They Ride


Once ancient greedy kings,
Now servants on dragons' wings
To do and destroy,
Middle Earth is the Dark Lord's toy!

So, armies and an alliance are made
To overthrow a king,
His armies and his wraiths,
To eradicate evil for good!

Together they ride
From far and wide,
Side by side,
To their doom or glory!

From Rivendell and Lothlorien,
from beneath the mountains,
from the Shire
and from lands of Men.

Together they all ride,
from far and wide,
side by side,
To their doom or glory!

They ride!

With bows and arrows,
with swords, and staffs,
with axes and daggers,
and with rock and stone.

Alongside one other, they fight,
So let this be a remembered night.
When all races together stood,
For evil to stop and for the continuity of good!

Together they all ride,
from far and wide,
side by side,
whether to their doom or to glory!

Let this be a remembered night.
When all races together stood,
for evil to stop and for the continuity of good!



Sunday, March 10, 2013

The Metamorphosis - A Commentary



The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka is the first novella I have read for Kafka. Unfortunately, I read in English for my German skills have not reached that level of sophistication. It is nonetheless an interesting piece.

The book published by Bantam Classics comprises an introduction, the novella, explanatory notes to the text, some documents, some critical essays about Kafka, his writing and finally some selected bibliography.

I must say that not only is the introduction a bore; it also contains a spoiler that tells the reader how the story ends. Although, The Metamorphosis is not your average story, still I would have liked some tiny bit left for me as a reader to find out for myself whilst reading.

The book is 201 pages, but the novella itself is only 59 pages long, divided on three chapters. The story begins with the climax, as critic Martin Greenberg points out. (The Metamorphosis, p. 61) “When Gregor Samsa woke one morning from unsettling dreams, he found himself changed in his bed into a monstrous vermin.” (The Metamorphosis, p. 3)

The novella begins with the metamorphosis and throughout there is no reference as to how this transformation occurred or why it did. Despite that, it is an interesting novel, and if it were not for the spoiler in the introduction, it might have been even more interesting. The story begins with a fact and a state of helplessness. Throughout, both the transformed Gregor and his family await another miracle that would change Gregor back to his former self. They hope that things would be back to the way they were; in other words a normal life.

Although the story is written in the third person, the reader cannot help but notice that the dominant atmosphere is that of Gregor. True, the story is about him and his ordeal, but nonetheless, the other characters’ emotions are seen, often, through Gregor himself. The story does not have the amount of action that I would have liked; it is not an action-filled novella, but it is nonetheless not devoid of it. The little things that happen to Gregor become actions in it. The reader cannot help but sympathise with him, for although he wakes up to find himself transformed “into a monstrous vermin”, Gregor constantly desires – or at least wishes to turn back - to save his family from looming poverty and hardship. Gregor sacrifices his life in order to work for the firm so that he can give his parents and sister a comfortable life and pay off his father’s debts. Even as a vermin, he still seeks to do the same – if he could.

Although Grete, Gregor’s sister, is seen as taking up the lead in caring for Gregor at the beginning, towards the end, I, as a reader, feel that she becomes cold and uncaring. She announces to both her parents that it is pointless to say that this monster is her brother and refuses to use Gregor’s name in addressing the creature. Furthermore, the reader sees that Gregor does nothing but work and when he has a few days off, he spends them at home. He has few friends and no one special that he would like to marry. Therefore, when he is transformed, or if we can look at the metamorphosis as an illness, his family begins to care for him but do not wish to see him. They realise the calamity that their sole provider is indisposed and will not be there to assist them or put food on their table. Only then does each family member consider finding a job to support one another. For me, this is selfishness on part of the family. One man, and not the father, works his entire life in a job that he does not like to support a family of four. His father has not worked in five years, since the collapse of the business, the mother is often depicted as too weak to do anything, but nonetheless exerts huge efforts to sew and do a few things around the house, and finally the seventeen-year-old sister who is seen crying for no reason whatsoever at the beginning of the novella, when Gregor would not open the door, takes the lead in giving the transformed Gregor food, cleaning his room and finally in neglecting him. Only when the family members realise that there will be no remedy for Gregor, does each of them find a job to cope with life and to meet their daily needs.

For me, the metamorphosis occurs on several levels, primarily the physical transformation of Gregor; then, there is Grete, who is viewed by her family, particularly her parents, as a child. In the three chapters of the novella, we see Grete’s metamorphosis from a crying child into a young woman who can juggle working as a salesgirl, studying a foreign language to improve her career and taking care of both her parents, at the same time. At the end of the novella, the whole family seems to have grown up to take responsibility of taking care and supporting one another.

The novella ends on a fairly positive note. The family goes out, the first time they had done in months, and are happy to see what a beautiful young woman Grete has become.


Works cited:
Kafka, Franz. The Metamorphosis. New York: Bantam Classics. 2004. Pages 3 and 61.