The excerpt from "Ulysses" by Alfred Lord Tennyson reflects the prevailing Victorian notion of duty, ambition, and the pursuit of adventure. The exploration of themes such as longing for adventure, the desire to achieve greatness, and the tension between duty and personal fulfillment are typical of Victorian values and ideals.
Odysseus of the Iliad. Ulysses was his Latin name.
in the poem Ulysses, he addresses his son Telemachus.
Alfred Lord Tennyson is the author of the poem Ulysses.
Lord Alfred Tennyson wrote in the Victorian style, characterized by a focus on emotion, nature, and personal experiences. His poetry often contained themes of love, loss, and the contrast between the beauty and harshness of life.
From Lord Tennyson's poem "Ulysses".
The speaker's tone in "Ulysses" by Alfred, Lord Tennyson is one of nostalgia and contemplation. Ulysses reflects on his past adventures and contemplates future ones with a sense of longing and restlessness.
The poem that begins with "He clasps the crag with crooked hands" is "Ulysses" by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. It is a dramatic monologue where the speaker, Ulysses, reflects on his desire for adventure and restlessness in old age.
Alfred,Lord Tennyson : Ulysses
Ulysses was written by the Irish novelist James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (1882-1941).The title is a latinised form of Odysseus, from Homer's Odyssey.James Joyce.
Ulysses G. Dietz has written: 'Victorian lighting: The Dietz catalogue of 1860' 'Great Pots'
Are you referring the novel Ulysses? if so it was written by James Joyce If you are referring to the Odyssey (where Ulysses is the main character) it was written by Homer and is actually an epic poem.
This technique is called allusion in literature, where a writer makes a reference to a person, place, or thing from history, mythology, or another literary work.