Milton, Soto, and Kolvenbach

 

Carine King


Milton wrote about not being able to reach "half of his life", yet he is becoming blind while he still a lot more work to do. The light represents the life spent and is forced to live a life of darkness caused by his blindness. Milton passionately describes the inner debate sparked by his feelings of not being productive, as his faith redeems him. The world talent here is used metaphorically is at the center of the reflection to express the loss of his writing ability. 

Gary Soto in "Red Palm" uses a lot of metaphors like "Dust settles on your forehead, dirt Smiles under each fingernail." This poem starts with a farmer working hard at a cotton plant. Talks about how the farmer was a fool when he was young and dropped out. As a farmer, he was making just enough to meet his needs. His failure at school pushed him to work harder as a farmer each day.

Kolvenbach talks about commitment to the service of faith and promoting justice in American Jesuit higher education and to make a choice.

Although all the three readings were interesting, it was not easy to understand, especially the first two. My favorite was "Red Palm" by Gary Soto.




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