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To avoid the curse, the Lady of Shalott must not look directly out of her window at the world outside, and instead must only view the reflections in her mirror and weave what she sees.
The Lady of Shallot is telling about he knights of the round table: SIr lancelot was one of them. The lady herself is basically under a curse in which the readers dont know why or how. but yea..just read the poem its pretty clear i guess...? haha this probs didnt help...
Alfred, Lord Tennyson wrote the poem, The Lady of Shallot, in 1842.
The cast of The Lady of Shallot - 1912 includes: Ivy Close as The Lady
No she did not
She left the web, she left the loom, she made three paces throught the room, she looked down to Camelot.
The knights in "The Lady of Shalott" are fictional characters who are depicted riding gallantly on their horses through the countryside. They do not play a significant role in the poem, but their presence adds to the romantic and medieval atmosphere of the setting.
i dont no
In the legend of the Lady of Shalott, the curse falls upon her because she looks directly at Sir Lancelot, whom she is forbidden to gaze upon. As soon as she sees him, the curse takes hold and she knows her time is near.
The speaker in "The Lady of Shalott" by Alfred Lord Tennyson is the narrator who tells the story of the Lady of Shalott and her tragic fate as she is cursed to weave and watch the world through a mirror. The speaker conveys the emotions and events in the poem from an outside perspective.
The poem never actually talks about that. The Lady of Shalott obviously knows about the curse, and who put the curse on it, but "She knows not what the curse may be". My guess is that it was probably a wizard, possibly Merlin.
c. arthurian