Anti Essays :: Free "Ulysses" Essay
Below is a free essay on "Ulysses" from Anti Essays, your source for online free essays, free research papers, and free term papers. Anti Essays also has a database of thousands of other free essays, free research papers, and free college essays. You can search for more free essays from Anti Essays using the search box above.
This free essay is for research purposes ONLY. Do NOT submit essays from Anti Essays as your own. If you use information from this free essay, it is your responsibility to cite it. MLA and APA citations can be found at the bottom of the page.
Submitted by Aleks on July 21, 2008
In the poem, through a monologue, Ulysses carries out his last journey and reflects back on his eventful life. It seem as if Ulysses is trying to justify his actions and explain his passions for travelling and adventure and that being his ‘hungry heart’.
From the first line of the poem, it becomes noticeable that Ulysses is bored and unexcited by his current position, ‘It little profits that an idle king’. His statement reveals that personally Ulysses gains no profit from being a king and that he would rather return to his travels and active life.
From Ulysses thoughts we can sympathise with him and see that he misses his adrenaline pumping past, his good and bad times. He talks about suffering, being alone, with company, on land and on sea, and this highlights the difference between his engaging past and ‘idle’ present. He talks about leaving a mark, a memory on everybody he came across ‘I am a part of all I have met’, his ability to do so makes him a positive person and someone who is looked up to.
Tennyson uses Ulysses as a metaphor to express his grief and longing. Just like Ulysses longs for his old life that had meaning to him, Tennyson longs for his life with Arthur in it. Through the explanation of Ulysses voyage, Tennyson expresses his own grief, but shows optimistic thoughts too ‘How dull is it to make a pause, to make an end’. This declaration shows his determination to embrace life and to live it to the full.
The poem also contains a strong element of pride and Ulysses talks about his life with a lot of pride, but also when he states ‘This is my son, mine own Telemachus’. The double acceptance shows Ulysses is proud of his son, but it could also be interpreted as a sign of unbelief and uncertainty. The fact Ulysses states that Telemachus is his son twice, could mean he needs reassurance that this grown man is in fact his son, that has grew up to be a king without his fathers presence.
You must Login to view the entire essay.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!
"Ulysses". Anti Essays. 21 Nov. 2008
<http://www.antiessays.com/free-essays/12343.html>
Ulysses. Anti Essays. Retrieved November 21, 2008, from the World Wide Web: http://www.antiessays.com/free-essays/12343.html