Shalott Jermaine Carlton Kianna Webb Giovonti King English 4 Mrs L Johnson D 7 The Lady of Shalott Alfred Lord Tennyson Brief Biography Historical Background Brief summary of the plot ID: 246943
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Slide1
The Lady of Shalott
Jermaine Carlton
Kianna Webb
Giovonti King
English 4
Mrs. L Johnson
D 7Slide2
The Lady of ShalottAlfred Lord TennysonBrief BiographyHistorical Background
Brief summary of the plot
Thesis Statement Slide3
Alfred Lord TennysonBrief Biography
Alfred Tennyson was born August 6th, 1809, at Somersby, Lincolnshire, fourth of twelve children of George and Elizabeth (Fytche) Tennyson. The poet's grandfather had violated tradition by making his younger son, Charles, his heir, and arranging for the poet's father to enter the ministry. (See the Tennyson Family Tree.) The contrast of his own family's relatively straitened circumstances to the great wealth of his aunt Elizabeth Russell and uncle Charles Tennyson (who lived in castles!) made Tennyson feel particularly impoverished and led him to worry about money all his life.Slide4
Alfred Lord TennysonHistorical Background
Tennyson (1809-1892) is not the last Romantic, but he is the last poet of the nineteenth-century to fully capture, in his early poems, the lyrical spirit of his great predecessors. An early poem like “Timbuctoo” echoes the naturalistic cadences of
Byron
and
Wordsworth
while
also resonating with the voice of the Victorian bard-sage to be. Tennyson’s attitude toward nature, like that of his strong precursors, is hard to represent in singular or unified terms. Whatever consolations nature offers in Tennyson are almost always overshadowed by a sense that nature does not care about human beings or that nature swallows up petty human concerns in its vastness and impersonal timelessness. Because his beloved Arthur Henry Hallam died of a sudden brain aneurysm at the age of 22, Tennyson came to doubt most of the faith of his youth, many of the details of a theology that asks humans to believe in a loving God–Hallam is dead at 22–who cares about us; Hallam is dead and Tennyson seeks some consolation in a world that now seems increasingly defined by scientific facts: the world has been here for countless eons of time that humans can barely imagine, the dinosaurs and other long-lived forms of life may have ruled the planet for millions of years, but now they are reduced to dust, and human history is just a tiny blip on the scale of biological, much less geological, time.Slide5
Brief summary of the plotThe Lady of Shalott
borrows from the Arthurian legend and is a poem about a woman who is isolated in a tower with a curse hanging over her. She cannot venture outside into the world to be with others. What is worse, she cannot even look directly outside. She sits at her loom weaving daily and looks at shadows of the world cast in a mirror. She envies the freedom of others and grows sick of her limitations. When Sir Lancelot appears, she spies a gallant knight and dares to look outside. The curse is set in motion as she races toward Camelot in a boat. Yet, the Lady of
Shalott
cannot escape her doom.Slide6
Thesis statement Slide7
Theme and Tone The theme of this poem is "live every day to the fullest, no regrets, make the best out of what you are given."The lady was put in a bad situation all of her life, never realizing it. She made the best of it. She was quietly content until Sir Lancelot passed by. She gave up a life of nothing to be with her true love if only for
moments.Slide8Slide9
Figurative language and poetic DevicesThe poet uses figurative language, which includes, metaphors, and personification
.
Metaphor
: Suggests that the fields clothe the world
....
In the poem, it used a lot of poetic/literacy techniques. Such as : Personification - "beard barley" (part 1, stanza 4, line 2) the barley doesn't have a beard but it has sort of long wheat-looking type that looks like a beard.
Pathetic
Fallacy - "In the stormy east-wind straining" (Part 4, stanza 1, line 1) *Pathetic Fallacy is when the human feelings/emotions are the same as the weather, art etc
Similie
- "Like to some branch of stars we see" (Part 3, stanza 2, line 2) Basically the bridle of the horse was sparkling, like the starry skies.
* A
similie
is when you compare one thing with another,
oftenly
use the word "like" or "as"
There's more personification - "And the silent isle
imbowers
" (Part 1 , stanza 2, line 8)
I think there's also a assonance (I'm not sure though) -
Whillows
whiten, aspens "quiver" (Part 1, stanza 2, line 1) and Little breezes dusk and "shiver" (Part 1, stanza 2 line 2) "Quiver" and "Shiver" are the assonance that are use.
And if you notice there's a rhyme scheme which is "
aaaabcccb
"Slide10
Poem Interpretation The lady of Shallot is a woman that is not allowed to see the town of Camelot. She lives in a tower and is not allowed to look out the window as she can see the town but she has placed a mirror so she can see out her window but just not far enough so she can see the town. She weaves what she can see. She is not allowed to because she has a curse put on her. Sir Lancelot visits her everyday but apart from him nobody knows her. We do not know why he visits the lady of shallot. One day she gets fed
up
and looks out the window and the curse is upon her. she is then found the next morning floating down the river of
Camelot
in a boat dead. on the boat she
has
in engraved her name...The lady of Shallot.Slide11
Conclusion Slide12