Sunday, August 28, 2016

Peachy Keen Analysis and Brew!

Forbidden Peach

Some readers may recall that Salwa Khoddam and I co-wrote an article titled "The Peach in Milton's 'Paradise Lost,' Marvell's 'Garden,' and Eliot's 'Prufrock'" in which we argue the following:
The article investigates the peach as symbol of the forbidden fruit in Milton's "Paradise Lost," Marvell's "Garden," and Eliot's "Prufrock." Milton focuses on the fruit's appearance as "downy," Marvell refers to the peach as "curious," and Eliot worries that to "dare" to eat a peach could disturb the universe. Milton's choice of "downy" fits the peach better than what we would now call an apple. Marvell's choice of "curious" fits the Christian world's long-held belief that curiosity was the vice that led Eve to try the forbidden fruit. Eliot's choice of "dare" fits Eve's having "dar'd" to eat the forbidden fruit in "Paradise Lost," for daring to eat the fruit can disturb the universe, as, for example, Eve's eating did. These three points are supported by context, analysis, explication, connections, etymology, and more. Noted in passing are a few brief references in art and literature to the peach as the forbidden fruit, and these are treated merely to show that such identification is not unheard of. More important are the connections drawn between the fruit in the three poems, for such connections are the focus of this paper.
I'd like to think that this article written by Salwa and me influenced Red Rock's decision to brew a peach-flavored ale, but the article probably had nothing to do with that.

Anyway, for those interested in the work of the spirit, here's a brief description of the "Forbidden Peach" brewing process, along with a few ratings . . .

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4 Comments:

At 6:09 AM, Blogger TheBigHenry said...

They'll make billions on it if it smells like fish.

 
At 6:27 AM, Blogger Horace Jeffery Hodges said...

Fish? You mean like tuna fish? I've heard-tell that only two things smell like tuna fish. One of them's tuna, and the other is something else, but they wouldn't tell me what.

And at my age, I no longer want to know!

Jeffery Hodges

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At 8:27 AM, Blogger TheBigHenry said...

Well, then, I won't tell you :)

Speaking of the Garden of Eden -- One day, God wanted to tell Eve something. When He saw Adam, He asked, "Where is Eve?" Adam said, "I saw her wading in the stream." God frowned and said, "Darn it. Now all the fish are going to smell."

 
At 9:23 AM, Blogger Horace Jeffery Hodges said...

A 'parabolic' response.

Jeffery Hodges

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