麻豆传媒

 

Leap day a day for romance

- February 29, 2008

This postcard from 1912 depicts the bachelor's anxiety of Leap day.
Next to Valentine鈥檚, February 29 is billed as the most romantic day. According to tradition, the leap day is when social customs regarding love and marriage are turned upside-down.

While leap day helps re-adjust the calendar, it鈥檚 also the day when women can romantically pursue men. The tradition goes all the way back to 5th century Ireland when St. Bridget complained to St. Patrick about the fair sex having to wait for too long for men to propose. In the 13th century, Queen Margaret of Scotland reinforced the tradition, declaring it the day when women had the right to propose to any man she fancied. In the United States, February 29 is known as Sadie Hawkins Day. In Al Capp鈥檚 L鈥檌l Abner cartoon strip, it was the only chance for Sadie 鈥 鈥渢he homeliest gal in the hills鈥 鈥 to snag a husband.

Here at Dalnews, leap day鈥檚 history provides us with a loose thematic connection to catch up with a story left over from Valentine鈥檚: the first annual Valentine鈥檚 Jotted and Judged Sonnet competition. Students were challenged by the Department of English and 麻豆传媒 English Society to write love poems in 14 lines.

But not all the entries turned out to be lovely-dovey. First-prize winner Peter Chiykowski went 鈥減ost-apocalyptic鈥 on Shakespeare鈥檚 Sonnet 18, 鈥淪hall I compare thee to a summer鈥檚 day.鈥

Here are the winning entries:

Untitled

Shall I compare thee to world鈥檚 ending?
An uncertain quiver that shakes the core,
That ushers with its furious rending,
A promise of silence and nothing more.
Promise me a world of cracking concrete,
Of empty cities and of soiled skies,
Where we strolling down the purposeless streets,
Speak of the ashes in our hair and eyes.
I wish to creep across your grey-clad heart,
Like the ivy across the tumbled stones,
And in a dying world not worlds apart,
We will go walking through the city鈥檚 bones.
聽聽聽聽 Through the greenest seasons fool lovers鈥 heads,
聽聽聽聽聽 In a wasted world we shall make our beds.

Peter Chiykowski is a second-year student from Richmond Hill, Ont.

Rendezvous

A shadowed, curtained, glowing, hidden place 鈥
Flushed skin to skin, forbidden tangled lust.
A violent kind of tryst arranged in haste:
鈥淲e can鈥檛, we can鈥檛.鈥 鈥淲e will, we will, we must.鈥
A day 鈥 one hundred lover鈥檚 years 鈥 apart,
Since from that last embrace themselves they wrenched,
Still hunger swells their separated hearts,
Desire for goblin鈥檚 fruits not eas鈥檒y quenched.
Once more, once more; a promised curtain call
To end at last their secret treachery,
But rising action doesn鈥檛 always fall 鈥
The pinnacle鈥檚 the finest place to be.
And so the lovers linger at the peak,
And hunger trumps betrayal if thrill you seek.

Amy Dempsey is a fourth-year honours student majoring in English.

Lady Rye

My lady is a piquant broad, endowed
With alluring amber shades that mask her
Subtley arrant ways; for though I鈥檓 master,
She the mistress, my nee leads me to bow
In awe of artifice that cheats the proud,
Caught by her warm kiss, possessed by the lure
Of greatness and wisdom that may endure
Beyond plagues and kingdoms and death鈥檚 cold shroud.
And I, I am one of that cuckold crowd 鈥
I draw my art from what her heat infers,
Her taste transmuting my passions to word,
Stinging my tongue that I roar song aloud.
聽聽聽聽 Though I am master, I cannot deny
聽聽聽聽聽 I take my lessons from fair Lady Rye.

See now I鈥檝e cracked wise to you, Miss Scarlet ...

Julia Clahane is a fourth-year arts student at 麻豆传媒.

Bored Games

I know you cheated in that Scrabble match.
Thinking of it now, I鈥檓 filled with pity.
I had both Fs, the limit of the batch,
Yet somehow you laid I-N-F-I-D-E-L-I-T-Y.
That first chess game, early in our wooing,
It seemed we鈥檇 mated fair 鈥榥鈥 square and right.
I now question what your queen was doing
Sneakily creeping 鈥榬ound that other knight.
See now I鈥檝e cracked wise to you, Miss Scarlet.
The dice was rolled, and snake eyes came to rest.
Parker Brothers preach fair play, you harlot
And frown upon your community chest.
I understand that keeping score is moot;
That has become a trivial pursuit

Mitchell Cushman is a fourth-year student majoring in English and theatre.

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