November 19, 2020: Difference between revisions
(Began adding more.) |
(Added more.) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Jt}}<div style="padding-top: 30px;"> | {{Jt}}<div style="padding-top: 30px;"> | ||
{{Center|{{Large|Ulysses}}{{refn|Tennyson writes: “There is more about myself in ‘Ulysses,’ which was written under the sense of loss and that all had gone by, but that still life must be fought out to the end” (quoted in {{harvnb|Ricks|1989|p=113}}).}} <br /> | {{Center|{{Large|Ulysses}}{{refn|Tennyson writes: “There is more about myself in ‘Ulysses,’ which was written under the sense of loss and that all had gone by, but that still life must be fought out to the end” (quoted in {{harvnb|Ricks|1989|p=113}}). The figure of Odysseus, the hero of Homer’s ''Odyssey'' and called “Ulysses” by the Romans, wandered for 10 years after the fall of Troy. In Tennyson’s poem, he faces domestic drudgery and indifference in his old age, and he longs to travel again to renew his spirit.}} <br /> | ||
By: [[w:Alfred, Lord Tennyson|Alfred, Lord Tennyson]] ([[w:Ulysses (poem)|{{date|1833}}]])}} | By: [[w:Alfred, Lord Tennyson|Alfred, Lord Tennyson]] ([[w:Ulysses (poem)|{{date|1833}}]])}} | ||
<div style="display: flex; justify-content: center; padding: 25px 0 25px 0;"> | <div style="display: flex; justify-content: center; padding: 25px 0 25px 0;"> | ||
Line 94: | Line 94: | ||
[[Category:11/2020]] | [[Category:11/2020]] | ||
[[Category:Poetry]] | [[Category:Poetry]] | ||
[[Category:Annotated]] |
Revision as of 06:29, 22 September 2021
It little profits that an idle king, |
Notes & Comentary
- ↑ Tennyson writes: “There is more about myself in ‘Ulysses,’ which was written under the sense of loss and that all had gone by, but that still life must be fought out to the end” (quoted in Ricks 1989, p. 113). The figure of Odysseus, the hero of Homer’s Odyssey and called “Ulysses” by the Romans, wandered for 10 years after the fall of Troy. In Tennyson’s poem, he faces domestic drudgery and indifference in his old age, and he longs to travel again to renew his spirit.
- ↑ These opening lines a clipped and melancholy and stony revealing a former traveler and man-of-action has become the victim of a life-weariness, an ennui that cannot be cured by idleness (Ricks 1989, pp. 114–115).
Works Cited
- Ricks, Christopher (1989). Tennyson (Second ed.). London: Palgrave.