Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Recipe for Faith for becoming the king of Rome

Ingredients:


  • 1 cup of nobility

  • Endless cups of thinking

  • 3 cups of love for Rome

  • 1 tbsp of fear of a terrible leader

  • a cup of passionless king

  • 2 pinches of care for the plebians

  • Quart of passion for your home town

  • 1/2 cup of doubt

  • 3 cups of clues

Pre-heat the oven by dropping cups of clues that the food can be king. Then add endless cups of doubt and thinking to the mix. Add a tbsp of passionless king to the mix to get it to start taking the texture of dough. Toss in the 2 pinches of love and care for the plebians. Mix well. Then lastly add some doubt and a whole quart of passion for the home town Rome and the dough will start to rise. Now toss everything in the oven and watch the dough settle. Air bubbles should start rising filled with hatred and watch them burst as if someone is stabbing them with swords. And then you will hav your outcome, a tradegic cake that if filled with burnt dough of death and tradegy.



Isaac Flyer, SAulius Baublys

Act IV Quote

Remember March, the ides of March remember.
Did not great Julius bleed for justice' sake?(20)
What villain touch'd his body, that did stab,
And not for justice? What, shall one of us,
That struck the foremost man of all this world
But for supporting robbers, shall we now
Contaminate our fingers with base bribes(25)
And sell the mighty space of our large honors
For so much trash as may be grasped thus?
I had rather be a dog, and bay the moon,
Than such a Roman.




Do you remember march, the fifteenth of march?



Didn't casear die for justice?



Did the person who did this do this for the sake of justice?



Shall one of the people of our group who killed him be simplified to robbers?



...and lose our honor for what we have done.



I'd rather be ruined to a dog than to be a roman like this.





This can be related to fate because their fate changed to this terror when they chose to kill caesar. They were drivin here by fate and can't go back. This can be related to the aspect of freewill because they were free in the decision to change their fate. And they were free to change the fate of others (caesar).





By: OVERLORD




Act IV Simile/Meaphore

Monday, April 25, 2011

Fate Shake Pudding

Fate Shake Pudding
Ingredients~


  • 1 cup of milk
  • 1 3/4 teaspoons of debt
  • 2 cups of doubts
  • 1 Julius Caesar's Ghost
  • 2 cups of a full army
  • 1/3 cup accusation
  • 1 cup of irony
  • 6 cups of honor
  • 2 daggers for sharpness

Directions

Add all ingredients inside the blender of Rome and put on purray for seven minutes before adding two daggers and place on high until all lumps form into the shape of two tombstones with the names of Brutus and Cassius etched into the surface.

After finished pour into a bowl and place in the fridge and wait a hour, afterwards grab two spoons and enjoy eating your fate shake.

WARNING: Do not consume on birthday.

-Optimus Prime

Thursday, April 21, 2011

The tragic end to the play Julius Caesar

Caesar died with hope,
Which drove Rome into crisis mode,
Causing war and tears

The ghost of Caesar,
Now wants revenge for his death,
Brutus is frightened

Brutus died with pride,
died with a sword in his side
He took his own life

-M&Monroe

Monday, April 18, 2011

Fate Vs. Freewill similie & metaphor by seven

Fate is like a map with and 'X' .
Freewill is like a map with out an 'X', you choose your own destination.

Fate is an itinerary , Freewill is a one-way ticket to and unknown place.


Caesar is like a rising wave that refuses to crash down towards nature's fate.