Selasa, 11 Oktober 2016

THE SUN AND THE MOON (Haenim Dalnim)


Once upon a time, there lived a poor woman with her son and daughter. She did chores for other families for a living. One day, she went to work for a rich man’s party and got some rice cakes there.

“My children must be hungry,” said the woman hurrying home.

On the way home, she met a big tiger.

            “How convenient, I happened to be starving,” said the tiger

            “P-Please save me… I’m a mother of two children and I must take care of them,” the woman begged.

The tiger hesitated, and replied,

“Give me a piece of rice cake. Then I will not eat you,” said the tiger.

The woman gave a piece of rice cake to the tiger. But the tiger kept following the woman.

“Give me a piece of rice cake. Then I will not eat you,” repeated the tiger.

The woman gave another piece of rice cake to the tiger. The tiger kept asking her for more rice cakes. She gave away all the rice cakes to the tiger. But it wasn’t enough to fill his stomach. Now she had no more rice cake. So the tiger ate her. But he wasn’t satisfying yet. So the tiger recalled what the woman had said and dressed in her clothes. He went to her house and pretended to be the children’s mom.

“Open the door, dear,” said the tiger.

“You are not my mom. Your voice is too hoarse. Her voice is soft,” said the brother.

“Oh, is it? Hmm, I have a cold.”

“Then, show me your hands,” said the sister.

The tiger showed his hands to them.

“Your hands are too hairy and dark. Her hands are white,” said the brother.

The tiger covered his hands with flour. And he showed his white hands to the children. Then the children opened the door. The tiger entered the house saying

“I will make dinner. Wait here.”



Then, the brother saw the tiger’s tail.

“It’s not Mom. It’s a tiger,” said the brother.

“What should we do?” said the sister.

“We have to run away from here,” said the brother.

The children ran out of the house and climbed up a tree near the well. The tiger looked for them around the house. But then, as he approached to the well, he saw the children’s face reflected on the water inside the well.

“Oh, you are in the well. I will scoop you up with this bowl,” said the tiger.

The sister in the tree laughed at the tiger.

            “Oh, you are in the tree,” said the tiger slowly lifted his chin towards the tree top.

The tiger tried to climb up the tree. But he could not do it.

“How did you climb up the tree?” said the tiger.

“We used oil,” lied the brother.

The tiger rubbed some oil on his hands. And he tried to climb up the tree. But he only slid down. Laughing at the tiger, the sister told the secret of how to climb up.

“All you need to do is use an axe to climb up,” said the sister.

The brother immediately covered his sister’s mouth but it was too late. Then the tiger made small cuts on the tree with an ax. Then, he could climb up the tree. The children were frightened so they prayed to God.

“Oh God, If you want us to live, please hand down a rope,” pleaded the children as they looked up towards God.

Right then, surprisingly, a thick rope came down from the sky. The children held onto it and went up to the sky. The tiger could not catch the children. The tiger prayed to God, too.

“If you want me to catch them, please hand down a rope.”

Then another rope came down from the sky. The tiger held onto it and went up to the sky. But the rope was rotten. The tiger fell down and died. Meanwhile, the children arrived to the end of the sky. At first, the brother turned into the sun and the sister changed into the moon. But the sister greatly feared the night’s darkness,

“I am scared of the night,” said the sister.

“I will be the moon for you instead,” said the brother.

So the sister switched roles with her brother. Therefore, in the end, the brother became the moon and the sister became the sun. Also, to this day, the reason why we are blinded when we look at the sun it because of the shy sister, who shines very brightly in order to make people unable to stare at her.

CASA DI GIULIETTA

Hello everyone! I’d like to tell you about a place which I really interested in. For me this place is a precious peace of art. For the most part I am a hopeless romantic and Italy has been a place I’ve wanted to go in my whole life. This place is tear dropping and a place to portray your thought to Juliet and wait for a response.


Shakespeare’s stories are so rooted in real life that it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between fact and fiction – just take ‘Juliet’s balcony‘. Although Shakespeare never visited Verona and his characters in Romeo & Juliet never existed, there is a 13th Century house in Verona where Juliet is said to have lived.
It once belonged to the Dal Cappello or Cappelletti family for many years. This house, a former inn, is now known as the Casa di Giulietta (Juliet’s House) and is one of Verona’s main tourist attractions. The combination of the similar name to Capulet and the fact that it has a balcony that looks out over a courtyard has turned it into ‘Juliet’ balcony’ – the actual balcony where Romeo and Juliet began to plan the events that led to their tragic deaths.
Casa di Giulietta located in the centre of Verona at via Cappello 23, it is a little difficult to find. Follow the directions to Piazza delle Erbe and once you see the graffiti covered sign post and the plaque above the archway, you will recognise it by the number of people inside the courtyard.

Address: Via Cappello, 23 – 37121 (near Piazza delle Erbe), Verona.
Price:
*Free entrance  with the Verona Card
*Entrance to the courtyard: free
*Entrance to the museum:
-    Standard € 6.00 – Reduced € 4.50 (groups minimum 20 persons, students 14-30 years old and over 60)
-    € 1.00 (Schools and young people 8 - 13 years old )
-    € 1.00 the 1st Sunday of the month for everyone (from January to May and from October to December)
Opening hours: Monday (13:30-19:30) & Tuesday-Sunday (08:30-19:30)
Telephone: 045 8034303

Entrance and Archway

Pass through the short dark tunnel, (more on that later), and you’ll find yourself in the intimate courtyard vying for a photo opportunity with fellow awe-struck visitors.

Look around in the courtyard and you’ll also find the souvenir shops with kitsch Romeo and Juliet memorabilia and young lovers are floating in heart-shaped clouds. Remember that you’re here in the romantic heart of Verona, with romance in your heart, you’ve come to see this. Juliet’s balcony.

Juliet’s Balcony

The tiny balcony is indeed picture pretty. But if you believe the folklore, the Capuleti family has never lived here and the balcony was a recent addition in 1936 by the government to attract tourism. But for just € 6.00, you can visit the interior of the house and you can stand on Juliet’s balcony and re-live the “ high-light” of the earthly life, as well as admire the furniture, the bed, and the beautiful velvet costumes worn by the actors in the Metro Goldwyn Meyer’s colossal “ Romeo and Juliet”. Besides, be prepared to rub shoulders with clichéd romantics 
reading each other passages from Shakespeare’s work.



Juliet’s Statue

Back in the courtyard, once you’ve elbowed enough photographers to secure a spot in front of Juliet’s bronze statue and you’ll see some people, particularly unmarried people, will touch Juliet’s statue in her right breast (a kind of good-luck ritual) in the hope of finding the love of their life. This peculiar tradition was probably started by someone with a fetish for cold shiny metallic objects.




Letters to Juliet

Those who enter the courtyard of Juliet’s house for the first time will be struck by the thousands of small scraps of paper which cover the floor to the ceiling. All honeymoon couples and young lovers will write down their love vows to their partner and stick them on the wall. A tradition has developed that if they leave a message with their names on it Juliet will cast a lucky spell on them and their life will be happy and their love will last for eternity.

Meanwhile, some people also seeking advice on relationships and some are written on paper meant to look like medieval parchment, while others are accompanied by photographs and drawings. Many are addressed simply to Juliet, Verona, and Italy.

There’s a problem with this, however. People stick their notes on to the brick wall beneath Juliet’s balcony and usually use chewing gum. The house belongs to the World Heritage Trust, who are concerned about the unsightly mess of hardened blobs of gum and tattered scraps of paper that are defacing the building. The Verona city council have drawn up a decree banning the sticking of notes on the walls and also the consumption of food on the premises, but as a long tradition the Council are finding it difficult to suppress – even with a 500 Euro fine for anyone found sticking anything to the walls! In the meantime removable wooden panels are in place with an invitation to the lovers to post their messages there.

Therefore, if you want to send a message you can tear a piece of paper from your spiral notebook, enter your message of love or anything you want to say and search frantically for a method to attach it to the wall, with a bit of adhesive tape of course. And then, just hope Juliet will cast a lucky spell for you or even reply your message because -in popular belief- there is also some staff called Juliet’s Secretary who always reply all those letter and send it back to the sender.



WHAT A LOVELY PLACE!



Source:

https://www.zainoo.com/en/italy/veneto/verona/juliets-house
http://www.nosweatshakespeare.com/resources/juliets-balcony/
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2230962/Casa-di-Giulietta-Romantics-banned-posting-love-letters-famous-Romeo-Juliet-home-Verona.html
http://www.tourism.verona.it/en/enjoy-verona/art-and-culture/monuments-and-sights/juliet-s-house
http://www.gourmantic.com/2010/05/27/the-real-letters-to-juliet-casa-di-giulietta-in-verona/