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Wanderer Above The Sea Of Fog Analysis
"Don't try to change your past...it's the only truth you've got" (Okhuozagbon). The past can be an
interesting thing – then again, so can the future. This suggests the painting, Wanderer Above the Sea
of Fog by Caspar David Friedrich. In the painting, a lone man standing on a crag of rocks
overlooking the sea. His left foot faces the sea and is higher than his right. His slender cane sits on a
third point on the rocks. His blonde hair is flopping in the sea breeze, but his long, green, pleated at
the bottom coat is unaffected. His green pants are swaying in the wind. The sea looks to be angled
downwards with the man in the center. There are at least three more visible outcroppings of rocks in
the sea. Two on his left, and two on his right, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
On the right, near the mountains, there is almost a rock tower of sorts. A fog of sea spray somewhat
obscures the view. The man seems lost and contemplative. His face is not visible, but his posture
indicates that he is thinking, about what, may never be known but perhaps it is the future. The
message seems to be that of contemplation about the future. The sea is an open expanse of water
with partially visible mountains in the distance. Fog obscures some of the view, except for the
outline of the mountains. The mountains are the end goal, the sea a path, and the fog is the
unknown. The man does not know what the fog obscures but knows that there are mountains in the
distance. The fog is the unknown of his future, the rocks his obstacles, the mountains are his
outcome, and the water is his path to that outcome or goal. The message of his painting is to
demonstrate the unknowns of a person's future and the possible ways it could come out. The man
could become trapped on one of the rock crags or arrive at a different mountain than he thought that
he was, but that is the beauty of his future – it is unknown. An open, unknown future can be a
beautiful
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Analysis Of The Lament Of The Old Woman Of Beare
"The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare", an Early Irish poem, is from the point of view of an old
woman who has begun to reflect on her life. "The Wanderer", is spoken by a bard who has been sent
into exile after the death of his Lord. While in exile he begins to review his life, miss everything he
has lost and look at life on a more spiritual level. Both speakers are experiencing what it feels like to
be lonely because the people that were once there for them have either left or they have passed
away. With a melancholic and nostalgic tone, both poems express the idea that people, youth, and
the material world are all transient. However, both poems acknowledge that although the pleasures
and good things in life are fleeting, the solutions to the problem is God.
The speaker in "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare" is feeling nostalgic, as she remembers
what the world was like during her younger years. The speaker says, "I've had my time with kings, /
drinking mead and wine;/ now I drink watery whey/ with wizened old women" (90–93). Here she is
comparing the way she once lived to how she lives now. This example shows how she has aged
because she is no longer drinking wine with young kings and having fun. Instead, she is drinking
whey, a less flattering drink, with old women. While in exile, speaker of "The Wanderer" also
chooses to focus on the joys that no longer exist. He has lost his family, his lord, and his home, and
has no choice but to go into exile. The Wanderer questions what happened to the comforts that he
used to enjoy, "Where are the seats of the feast? where are the joys of the hall?" (93). The Wanderer
searches for a mead hall only to find that they are all toppled like his own, and this leads him to
realize that nothing lasts forever.
The decay of life joys arises in both poems. In "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare", it is youth
and the people around her, and in "The Wanderer" it is friendships, family, his lord, and the comforts
of his home. The Wanderer describes that earthly things will not last forever and will eventually go
to waste:
The wise man must realize how ghastly it will be when all the wealth of the world stands waste, as
now here and there throughout this
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The Wanderer Vs. The Seafarer
In the Anglo–Saxon story "The Wanderer" the exile is self inflicted due to the narrator trying to find
a new lord. Similar to the story "The Seafarer", the narrator states how lonely he is and how cold he
is. The narrator exiles himself after all his kinsmen and lord are killed most likely during a fight or
battle. The exile is very hard for the narrator because he is all alone. The separation from his
kinsmen is the worst he has ever felt and he does not have anyone else to rely on during his journey
looking for a new lord. The difference between "The Wanderer" and "The Seafarer" is that the
narrator in "The Wanderer" did not choose his exile like the narrator in "The Seafarer."
In the Anglo–Saxon story "The Wife's Lament", the exile
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What Does The Wanderer Mean
Regrets and Old Age The poem, "The Wanderer" describes the sorrowful life of a "lonely traveler"
whose kinsmen have been slaughtered and his Lord is deceased (line 1). The Wanderer is traveling a
cruel journey "sharing [his] bread with sorrow alone, an exile in every land," "friendless and poor"
(lines 30–33). However, this lonely man was not physically exiled from every land for his possible
wrongdoings, but he mentally exiled himself because of his old age and his regrets in life. The
Wanderer proclaims that life is dark and twisted and reminders of "the endless slaughters of a
bloody past" will reign until the end of time (lines 88 and 89). Throughout the poem, it is
highlighted that the Wanderer is near death and, therefore, he laments
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A New Kind of Dreaming
"Conflicts and challenges cause the characters to change and grow"
Introduction:
Anthony Eaton's a new Kind of Dreaming helps the reader to recognise the various challenges and
conflicts that cause the characters to change and grow. Anthony Eaton best expresses Jamie as an
outsider that is trying to find his place in the world, while uncovering the secrets of Port Barren's
shady past. This changes Jamie from an adolescent delinquent to a responsible and admirable
person. Jaime develops friendships that lead him to trusting and sympathetic qualities that are
unusual for him in his past of crime. Jamie faces a challenge to build a stronger relationship with
Cameron, but this is an obstacle for Cameron as he tries to understand Jamie and ... Show more
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Having Cameron in his life changed Jamie and challenged him to become a more preferable person.
Body Paragraph 2:
A challenge that Jamie has to face and overcome is when he tries to have some sense of belonging
to the community of Port Barren. Archie, his guardian throughout the novel, tells him his version of
a dreamtime story called 'The wanderers and the lost ones'. This story challenges Jamie to think
whether he is lost or a wanderer. This makes him feel responsible for finding out who is disturbing
the balance and it is up to him to try and restore it. This is shown to the reader when Jamie thinks,
"It was weird, no beginning, no middle, no end, no plot. And yet he couldn't shake the feeling that
there was something important behind the strange words. He pondered it but couldn't make anything
of it" [page 126]. The story makes Jamie wonder who he is and how he belongs in the community.
This challenges him to think more about himself and what he needs to do to change and become a
better person. This also made him change the way he thought about himself, it made him to thrive to
do the best he can.
Conclusion:
Jamie faces many conflicts and challenges throughout the novel and they all have an effect that
makes him change in character. Jamie's close relationship with Cameron helps him to thrive to be
more confident
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Performance Analysis: Fantasy in C Major, Op. 15 (D. 760)...
Performance Analysis: Fantasy in C Major, Op. 15 (D. 760) ("Wanderer" Fantasy)
Schubert composed the Fantasy in C Major ("Wanderer" Fantasy) in 1822. This fantasy became a
milestone in music history because it was the first time when a composer "integrated a four–
movement sonata into a single movement." Schubert did so by matching the sequence of a
traditional four–movement sonata (Allegro, Adagio, Scherzo, Finale) to one big sonata form
(exposition, development, recapitulation, coda). This exploration opened a new era of composing
romantic music because it created an expanded form with more freedom in theme. Composers in
this way were granted more freedom to compose based on their personal imagination and to
compose with more virtuosity. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
But still, Brendel's performance shares modern "strait" characteristics with Pollini's recording
because of its accuracy from the text. It was more difficult to find recordings earlier than the 1950s,
but recordings from Walter Rehberg, Edwin Fischer, Vladimir Sofronitzky and Elly Ney proved that
earlier approaches to the Wanderer Fantasy were somewhat different. Their practices of this piece
were marked by agogic accent, rhythmic nuance, in a way with more freedom from the romantic
approach and less accuracy from the "straight" playing.
The recording Walter Rehberg made in 1927 started with a quarter note equals 158 and slowed
down to an eighth note equals to 55 in Adagio. Not only the range for tempo rubato was wider, but
there were also agogic accent and rhythmic nuance in his playing. An example would be at bar 32 in
Allegro, where Rehberg created an agogic accent by letting the chord on right hand appear slightly
later (Example 3). In Adagio, Rehberg spread out some chords from bar 9 to bar 17 to emphasis the
melody (Example 4). The arpeggiated chord was a trait of romantic practice and was shared by
Edwin Fischer in his recording in 1934. Fischer spread out every chord as an accent on sforzando
from bar 165 to 176 in Allegro (Example 5). Fischer also did not follow every dynamic mark on the
score. Instead of starting with fortissimo in Presto, Fischer played a piano. This occurred at bar 277
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The Seafarer Rhetorical Analysis
"The Wanderer" and "The Seafarer" are both elegies that reflect Christian attitudes in their own
respective views. Meaning it seems that they offer two different levels off the messages being sent
and how it is perceived. This essay will explain the Attitudes the Christian influence shows in each
elegy. "The Seafarer" has a more explicitly Christian message in terms of the directness of the
message. It talks about a man's journey and his walk through life. How he realizes that the life he is
currently leading will eventually have an end. He goes on to let the reader know his accounts and
how the knowledge attained allows him to put his faith in God. So rather than dwell on the flesh and
what is in this current life time he focuses on his everlasting
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Analysis Of The Lament Of The Old Woman Of Beare
"The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare", an Early Irish poem, is from the point of view of an old
woman who has begun to reflect on her life. "The Wanderer", is spoken by a bard who has been sent
into exile after the death of his Lord. While in exile he begins to review his life, miss everything he
has lost and look at life on a more spiritual level. Both speakers are experiencing what it feels like to
be lonely because the people that were once there for them have either left or they have passed
away. With a melancholic and nostalgic tone, both poems express the idea that people, youth, and
the material world are all transient. However, both poems acknowledge that although the pleasures
and good things in life are fleeting, the solutions to the problem is God.
The speaker in "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare" is feeling nostalgic, as she remembers
what the world was like during her younger years. The speaker says, "I've had my time with kings, /
drinking mead and wine;/ now I drink watery whey/ with wizened old women" (90–93). Here she is
comparing the way she once lived to how she lives now. This example shows how she has aged
because she is no longer drinking wine with young kings and having fun. Instead, she is drinking
whey, a less flattering drink, with old women. While in exile, speaker of "The Wanderer" also
chooses to focus on the joys that no longer exist. He has lost his family, his lord, and his home, and
has no choice but to go into exile. The Wanderer questions what happened to the comforts that he
used to enjoy, "Where are the seats of the feast? where are the joys of the hall?" (93). The Wanderer
searches for a mead hall only to find that they are all toppled like his own, and this leads him to
realize that nothing lasts forever.
The decay of life joys arises in both poems. In "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare", it is youth
and the people around her, and in "The Wanderer" it is friendships, family, his lord, and the comforts
of his home. The Wanderer describes that earthly things will not last forever and will eventually go
to waste:
The wise man must realize how ghastly it will be when all the wealth of the world stands waste, as
now here and there throughout this
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Wife's Lament And Beowulf Comparison
When it comes to exile it's being banished from your everyday way of life away from civilization.
While being used in Beowulf, "The Wife's Lament", and "The Wanderer" it gives the reader a
somewhat sympathetic insight of what's going on. In Beowulf, Grendel was born into exile because
of his family evil doings. "The Wife's Lament" is separated from her lover and banished to exile to
live without her lover. In "The Wanderer" a battle begins and he loses all of his kinsmen and then he
becomes living in exile. In Beowulf the setting takes place in "The Hall of Herot". Hrothgar who is
king of his people the Danes gives celebrations, treasures, and gifts to his Danes people which show
bonds of kinship. The Hall of Herot represents fun, laughter, parties for the Danes. Then there is
another region outside of The Hall of Herot which is the complete opposite made up of moors, wild
marshes, and fog. They have a monster by the name of Grendel ... Show more content on
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(21–25) She was forced to live in exile with her lover, but they were separated to live in exile in two
different places. She was forced to live under an oak tree in an earthen cave. However, her husband
was her home and inside of him she found much joy. Now she had a new place to call home and she
found no joy. She was very sad and depressed others get to enjoy and live their life with their lovers,
but she couldn't. The wife is very lonely and sad so she sits under the oak tree on summer–long days
and cry about being banished to exile. My beloved will suffer The cares of a sorrowful mind; he will
remember Too often a happier home. Woe to the one Who must suffer longing for a loved one. (50–
53) The wife empathized with anyone who suffers from loneliness of being away from their loved
one in exile. The Wanderer also has a fate similar to that of "The Wife's
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What Is The Mood Of The Seafarer
The Seafarer is a elegy–style poem that depicts the suffering and the hardships of an unnamed
traveler of the sea. It is notably similar to the poem from the previous lesson , The Wanderer, in the
sense that most of the poem consists of the narrator sharing his misfortunes with the readers. The
poem takes readers on a mental walk–through of the narrator´s "Psychological Journey" that begins
with him expressing his sorrow and concludes with his realization that, despite the hardships he
endures in his life at sea, he should live in gratitude to God for all that He has done. The narrator´s
"Psychological Journey" undergoes several different seasons. These seasons are both emotional and
literal as the climate briefly changes from Winter to Spring halfway through the poem. The narrator
´s emotional seasons begin on a fairly grim note. He introduces the readers to his harsh seafarer
lifestyle that calls for extreme endurance of vicious weather and bitter cold; not to mention the
emotional endurance that he struggles to maintain. In the opening line, readers catch a hint of
something that, depending one´s perspective, can be interpreted as sarcasm from the narrator.
Simply put, he says that his life would make a good song; the trials he faces as a seafarer, though
they wear him out, could end up entertaining others. In lines 4–33 provide an ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
No seafarer is above fearing for their future. However, his realization begins in line 103 when he
begins his "speech" on the importance of fearing Godd and ends the poem in an attitude of gratitude.
This seems a little odd at first, that someone who started out being so sorrowful could become so
thankful and content. However, this realization that God, the creator of the world, is all knowing and
all powerful and loves you is a message that can comfort even the most weary of men and it is
certainly something to be thankful
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Similarities Between The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament
To the Anglo–Saxon people, an exile was the worst fate imaginable because their society valued
companionship and loyalty. The Anglo–Saxon elegies portray sadness and mourning because of the
speaker's exile, but at the same time a veiled beauty. The elegies, "The Seafarer," "The Wanderer,"
and "The Wife's Lament," exhibit the seemingly contrasting traits of misery and beauty. "The
Seafarer" shows beauty in the contrast between the sailor's exile from youth and the joy he finds in
God. The seafarer contrastingly states, "Thus the joys of God / Are fervent with life, where life itself
/ Fades quickly into the earth" (ll. 64–66). God's gifts, full of life, focus on the beautiful image of
God's joy and everlasting life. The seafarer mourns the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
There is a perfect purity in the idea of their love lasting until they die, which shows a fierce beauty
in them standing up against the cruel world together. She claims that her optimistic notion of her
marriage has turned around and failed. She believes that they never had true love or even a
friendship. Her tone throughout the entire poem seeps with bitterness at the betrayal of her beloved
and the audacity of her husband's family to plot against their marriage. Though her tone tells a
different story, her words show the perfect love in the tale of her marriage in the past. Not only is
there beauty in the love of their past relationship, but also a cruel beauty in the tragedy of being
separated from her
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Similarities Between The Wanderer And The Dream Of The Rood
Comitatus in The Wanderer and The Dream of the Rood The Wanderer and The Dream of the Rood
are two Old English poems that demonstrate the link between lord and thane. This bond, also known
as the comitatus, is highlighted with imagery to effectively portray the physical intimacy involved.
The idea that everything is fleeting is emphasized to show the significance of the comitatus.
Furthermore, the beauty of the relationship is shown by contrasting the shame that the Wanderer
feels at the end of the poem to the honour and glory that is thrown upon the cross after it willingly
suffers along with Christ. In all, the ideals of the comitatus during the Medieval Times are clearly
advocated through the illustration of the physical intimacy, shame and honour involved in the two
poems. To start off, the two poems of interest both share the central idea that everything in life is
fleeting. The Wanderer is a lament on the lost ways of life. The Wanderer thinks back to the times he
was free from exile. He nostalgically compares his life then to the one he has now and comes to
realize how quickly the time has gone by. From lines 73 to 77, it says "The wise man must realize
how ghastly it will be when all the wealth of this world stands waste, as now here and there
throughout this middle–earth walls stand blasted by the wind, beaten by frost, the buildings
crumpling." There is a lack of hope in this passage. The idea that things that seem concrete are very
temporary is emphasized when
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The, The Wanderer And The Seafarer
In the medieval period, the Old English elegies use unnamed speakers that offer similar descriptions
of devastated landscapes and immense personal hardships. However, where the unknown authors' of
the Old English elegies often present smilier descriptions and themes across their respective works,
they do not present similar opinions on larger concerns like religion and the role of community. This
is a concept that is interwoven into the framework of the Old English elegies "The Wanderer" and
"The Seafarer". By comparing and contrasting these two works, this paper will argue that the
unnamed narrators' vivid descriptions of landscapes, circumstances surrounding their exile, and
climactic perspectives on the earthly community function solely ... Show more content on
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However, where the narrator in "The Wanderer" focuses his descriptions on the abandoned and
crumbling manmade landscape around him that is entirely devoid of a sense of community, the
narrator in "The Seafarer" does not. Unlike the wandering narrator, the seafaring narrator focuses his
descriptions of the community that is present in nature. The seafarer the utterly rejects the notion
that a "sheltering family / could bring consolation for his desolate soul" (25–26). This "sheltering
family" (25) that the seafaring narrator alludes to in this line is the exact form of close–knit family
that the narrator in "The Wanderer" laments for desperately. While the seafaring narrator offers
striking similar descriptions of the landscape being "bound by ice" (9), he does not focus on these
descriptions to dwell on the loss of an earthly community. Instead, the narrator in "The Seafarer"
finds the landscape that he inhabits wonderfully abundant with natural – even spiritual – elements
that are commonly associated with an earthly community. In the barren landscape, the seafaring
narrator discovers "the wild swan's song / sometimes served for music" (19–20) and "the curlew's
cry for the laugher of men" (20–21). These vibrant and vivid descriptions of the natural world that
the narrator discovers in the harsh,
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The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament
The peril of exile was a major source of anxiety in Anglo–Saxon society. The lyrics of "The
Seafarer," "The Wanderer," and "The Wife's Lament" infer that the fundamental precipitate of
Anglo–Saxon anxiety was the threat of exile. "The Seafarer," "The Wanderer," and "The Wife's
Lament" all share the common theme of exile in the Anglo–Saxon society. The peril of exile can be
an eerie topic, because it is unknown when exile will occur. Each of these poems manifests exile in
diverse ways. Exile is a long stay away from home is if often enforced, but is occasionally self
imposed, as it is in "The Seafarer." Whether it is enforced or self imposed, exile has caused
apprehension for plenty because it is the fear of the unknown. Exile can occur ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Similar to "The Wanderer," in "The Wife's Lament," the wife experiences a friendless exile after her
husband or "lord" sets out on a journey at sea, leaving her in solitary and desolated. After the
husband leaves, the wife begins to experience a lonely exile. She is now all alone and does not know
when or if her husband is returning. As time continues on, the wife begins to experience further
exile and worry. Later, she decides she is going to depart on a journey to find the love of her life.
Unfortunately, the wife is unable to rejoin her husband due to a plot by his kinsman. Because of the
plot by the kinsman, she is damned to live in a hole in the ground where she experiences complete
exile, as she is desolated in solitary and is forced to live with her
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The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament
Exile was a terrifying threat for the Anglo–Saxons. In that time the villages were far and few
between, so exile was very serious. One who was exiled was alone and had to find their own food
and shelter, which could have been very difficult for the Anglo–Saxons. Exile was a form of
punishment, but sometimes it was chosen. We know exile was a major part of life in this time
because many of the writings found mention it. "The Seafarer," "The Wanderer," and "The Wife's
Lament" all mention exile. Each lyric tells a different experiences with exile. Although, the speakers
in each lyric were exiled for different reasons they each had similar experiences. In "The Seafarer"
the man tells of exile at sea. The seafarer tells how frigid and lonely being at sea is. There is nothing
around except ice and water, no trees or buildings. He only hears the sounds of birds and the waves
instead of the sound of people and the mead hall. It is difficult to get food and the man is often
starving. It is extremely dangerous to be at sea and most people would not go willingly often.
However, the seafarer chose to go to sea, he chose to go in exile. The seafarer chose exile at sea
because he did not like the people he left behind on land. He feels men no longer have any pride or
honor. The man ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In each of the lyrics the speakers were exiled for very different reasons, but one feeling they all
shared was sadness. The man in "The Seafarer" was sad and disappointed because the way men
were not acting they same way men had in the past. They no longer had glory or honor they way
they did in the past. The man in "The Wanderer" was sad because his lord and comrades had died.
Everyone can understand being sad after losing love ones. The wife in "The Wife's Lament" was sad
because her husband left her. She is also sad because of her hardships with the other lover and her
husband's
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Love And Loss In The Wanderer's The Wanderer
The major themes were mourning of the lost, enduring pain of one's heart, yearning for dear one's
love, and putting time as a fault for these grievances.
In The Wanderer, the man mourns for his former position of a warrior who had a great lord, friends,
and joy. He sought for comfort and a companion –– "One acquainted with pain understands how
cruel a traveling companion sorrow is for someone with few friends at his side" (line 29–31)–but he
soon forces himself to endure pain by stating that "A wise man must be patient, not too hot of his
heart nor hasty of speech...A man should hold back his boast until ... when he truly knows to direct
his heart on the right path" (line 65– 72) and " A good man holds his words back, tells his woes not
too soon, baring his inner heart before knowing the best way, an eorl who acts with courage" (line
112–113). He then blames the time by stating that his friends disappeared so suddenly from his life
like seagulls flying away from shifting waves (line 45–48).
Similarly, in The Wife's Lament, she mourns for her husband who became separated with her
because of exile. She also forces herself to endure the pain –"If ever anyone should feel anguish,
harsh pain at heart, she should put on a happy appearance while enduring endless sorrow..." (line
42–45). She stated: " A happy pair we had promised each other, that death alone would ever divide
us, and nothing else" (line 21–23), but "All that is changed; our nearness once is now as though it
never had
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The Battle Between Grendel And Beowulf
Carl Van Clausewitz once said, "Courage, above all things, is the first quality of a warrior." In a
culture where being a warrior is a very integral part of everyday lives, having courage is a key
component of social survival. To have courage means to be able to defend a kingdom by every
means possible. It means protecting and ascertaining the wellbeing of the people within one's own
kingdom. And above all, courage means remaining loyal to one's king, regardless of the
circumstance. This is the warrior culture that Beowulf in Beowulf was a part of successfully as a
thane, and the same warrior culture that leads the narrator in The Wanderer to lament past memories.
In Beowulf, the fight between Grendel and Beowulf was certainly a nail–biter. In this fight,
however, Beowulf shows his courage by doing his absolute best at defending the kingdom by taking
on this gruesome monster. Grendel was wreaking havoc on the kingdom to no end. He was killing
many and terrorizing the citizens greatly. When Beowulf heard of this, as a courageous thane, he
stepped in to try to stop this and protect the people. "Hygelac's kinsman kept [Grendel] helplessly
locked in a handgrip. As long as either lived, he was hateful to the other. The monster's whole body
was in pain; a tremendous wound appeared on his shoulder. Sinews split and the bone–lappings
burst. Beowulf was granted the glory of winning; Grendel was driven under the fen–banks, fatally
hurt, to his desolate lair (Lines
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The Wife's Lament And The Seafarer
In the Anglo–Saxon epic poems "The Wife's Lament," "The Wanderer," and "The Seafarer," the
authors make their poetry much more interesting and enjoyable by inserting literary devices that add
meaning and cohesiveness to each line. Each poem contains multiple literary devices such as
kennings, caesuras, and imagery. These tools work together in order to add mood and transparency
to the poetry.
"The Wife's Lament," translated by Ann Standford, uses numerous literary devices to convey the
pain and emotion of an exiled wife. The author of the poem uses a metaphor to compare the cave the
wife has moved into to an empty hall, "under an oak tree in this den in the earth. / Ancient this earth
hall." (Stanford 28–9). Comparing the cave to an empty hall shows the loneliness and isolation the
abandoned wife is feeling. Another device used by the author in "The Wife's Lament" is
juxtaposition. In lines 42–43, the author writes, "May that young man be sad–minded always / hard
his heart's thought" (Stanford). This transition from the wife to her ... Show more content on
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In the lines 8–9, the author of the poem uses a metaphor to compare icy bands to frozen chains. This
creates an image in the readers' minds by suggesting that the ice around the sailor's feet is holding
him down as if it was a chain. The author continues creating a picture in the minds of readers when
he uses a kenning to create a new description for hail: "Frost bound the earth and hail would fall, /
The coldest seeds" (Raffel 33). This kenning serves to provide an alternate view and allude to the
freezing weather conditions the narrator faces. Next, the author of "The Seafarer" uses repetition
with the word "so" in lines 40–41 and "no" in lines 44–45. This repetition exaggerates the seafarer's
misery by making it seem like he has wasted opportunity and failed to acquire anything of value in
his
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Similarities Between The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament
The poems "The Seafarer," "The Wanderer," and "The Wife's Lament" are all similar because they
all involve exile. Exile means leaving all your family, friends and a place once grown up in. Now if
someone were to leave their country, friends, and family, how would they might feel? Many would
probably say it sucks. In this paper I am going to be talking about the three poems and telling the
fervent of them.
In the "Seafarer" the picture shows the people being in the ocean trying to go a direction. The poem
of the "Seafarer" is about the man leaving his life to go sail and fish. On page 19 line 1 it says, "It
tells how the sea took me, swept me back and forth in sorrow and fear and main, showed me
suffering in a hundred ships, in a thousand ports, and in me." That explains how he feels about his
situation, it's the starting of trying to get his point across. "The Wanderer" picture shows, a storm
going and the waves hitting a rock. Acting as the grievous feelings of the person. "The Wanderer" is
about the compassionate he leaves to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
On page 23 line 18 it says, "So have I also, often in the wretchedness fettered my feelings, far from
my kin, homeless and hapless, since days of old, when the dark earth covered my dear lord's face,
and I sailed away with sorrowful heart, if far or near lived one to
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Values Of Christianity And Paganism In 'The Wanderer'
Most scholars think "The Wanderer" first appeared as a piece of oral poetry during the 5th or 6th
century, a time when the Germanic Pagan culture of Anglo–Saxon England was undergoing a
conversion to Christianity. It contains traces of both traditional Germanic warrior culture and of a
Christian value system. The speaker for much of the poem is a warrior who has had to go into exile
after the slaughter of his lord and relatives in battle. Now, he contemplates what the experience of
the exile teaches him about life.
For most of the poem, the speaker expresses traditional Germanic beliefs about how a wise man
should act, the inevitability of death, and mankind's inability to change his fate. The poem is
bookended, though, by the Christian idea of the possibility of God's favor and grace, which the
speaker holds up as the only possible refuge from all the misery he witnesses. The relationship
between fate – in Old English, wyrd – and God's grace is not clear in the poem; the presence of both
might be evidence of "The Wanderer's" position at the meeting point of Christianity and Paganism.
"The Wanderer" is both a lament for all the things the speaker – and people more generally – have
lost, and also a reflection on what wise men learn from their life experiences. With this dynamic
duo, "The Wanderer" combines parts of two traditional genres of Old English poetry: the elegy, or
lament, and the wisdom poem. These two genres aren't unrelated, since Anglo–Saxon poets believed
that
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Comparing Wanderer, The Wife's Lament And The Seafarer
Exile is commonly seen in Anglo–Saxon literature, specifically the poems: The Wanderer, The
Wife's Lament, and The Seafarer. All three poems deal with the idea of losing something and
missing the something so much it pains them to think about it. Although in many cases, the person
experiencing exile has nothing to do but think about their exile. In The Wanderer, the speaker has
lost all of his kinsman over time. He feels exiled by his "misery, grievous disasters, and death of
kin" and he is "weary of exile." It is physically straining for him to feel this way everyday, but he
cannot do anything about it. He recounts how some of his companion's died saying "one a bird bore
over the billowing sea; one the grey wolf slew; one a grieving earl ... Show more content on
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She is sent to live underneath an oak tree in the middle of the woods and must bear her husband's
anger everyday. In the first stanza, the woman says the pain she feels now is much more painful than
anything else she has felt in her life. "I a woman tell what griefs I had since I grew up new or old
never more than now." This is the woman's form of exile. "Often we vowed that but death alone
would part us two naught else." When her and her husband first got married she believed they would
never be parted, but circumstances got in the way. Her husband's kinsman plotted to separate them
and succeeded. She misses not only her loved one, but also her young naivety about love. "I grieved
each dawn wondered where my lord my first on Earth might be." She feels thrown away without her
love beside her and remembers each morning at dawn. She says her old friends are sleeping soundly
in their beds and she is walking by herself alone "through these earth halls." She describes the place
she is exiled to as dark and overgrown from lack of care, which can be used to describe how she
feels as well. She ends the lyric by wishing her husband to feel the same pain she feels everyday.
"He remembers too often a happier
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Critical Appreciation Of The Poem The Wanderer
Response to Literature: The Wanderer The Wander is an Elegy–style poem that depicts the suffering,
exile, and memoirs of an anonymous narrator who refers to himself differently according to what
part of his life he is sharing; a "Lone–dweller", an "Earth–stepper", and the "wise man and the
Warrior". Although, there is still a lot of debate on whether or not there was only one narrator
throughout the poem. The Wanderer is believed to have been created around the 5th or 6th century,
being orally "handed down" from generation to generation. However, it was actually written down
in the 10th century. It was then duplicated in the Exeter book, the biggest manuscript collection of
Old English poetry in existence, by scribes and is preserved ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
It´s also believed that the "earth– stepper" and this unspecified narrator are one in the same. These
lines consist of the narrator´s description of not only the ideal wise man, but also the ideal warrior.
The placement of these ideas is interesting. The narrator begins his descriptions of the ideal wise
man and warrior shortly after monologuing about his suffering and solitude. The Earth–stepper´s
testimony segues into the description of the Wise man. It´s as if the narrator has goes through a short
phase of introspection. (the wise man is also mentioned several times between line
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Psychotic Break In The Wanderer
In "The Wanderer", the speaker tells us about the events of an attack on his town and people. He is
the only person that makes it through. Longing for a reconnection to human life, he travels through
empty lands looking to replace his dead lord, kinsmen, and friends. The only connection he has to
human life along this journey are his memories. Solitude makes the speaker believe that all things
on earth come to a tragic end. The poem "The Wanderer" by Anglo–Saxons is about social isolation
and reveals a psychotic break. Essentially, the speaker's psychotic break originates from three main
things that happen to him. The first event, that started his decline in mental health, is the war that
wiped out his people. According to NAMI, "A traumatic event such as a death, war or sexual assault
can trigger a psychotic episode" (Early Psychosis). The speaker tells us that he has gone through
both war and many deaths. The next element that contributes to his deterioration is his ... Show
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On several occasions, the speaker tells the reader about his hallucinations. For instance, he says "
Sometimes it seems I see my lord, / Kiss and embrace him..." (110). Seeing and touching his lord is
an example of not only visual hallucination but also a kinesthetic hallucination. The speaker using
the word sometimes at the beginning of the sentence signifies this wasn't a one–time occurrence. In
the article Early Psychosis and Psychosis, it states that psychotic breaks typically involve
hallucinations (Early Psychosis). In addition, the speaker says "Everything earthly is evilly born,..."
(111). The reader can infer that the speaker believes all things are malicious and against him. In
other words, the speaker is paranoid. As reported by Nall, paranoia is an example of a psychotic
symptom (Nall). Paranoia coupled with hallucinations illustrate to the reader that the speaker is
experiencing a psychotic
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Comparing The Wife's Lament And The Seafarer
In the Anglo–Saxon epic poems "The Wife's Lament", "The Wanderer", and "The Seafarer", the
authors make their poetry much more interesting and enjoyable by inserting literary devices that add
meaning and cohesiveness to each line. Each poem contains multiple literary devices such as
kennings, caesuras, and imagery. These tools work together in order to add mood and transparency
to the poetry.
"The Wife's Lament" is a poem that was translated by Ann Standford, and it uses numerous literary
devices to convey the pains and emotions being felt by the narrator, an exiled wife. The author of
the poem uses a metaphor to compare the cave the wife has moved into to an empty hall: "under an
oak tree in this den in the earth. / Ancient this eath hall." ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Kennedy, utilizes literary devices to make the plot clear and organized, while also adding imagery to
the poem. The first example of this is the flashback used in the first paragraph: "Homeless and
helpless he fled from fate / Thus saith the wanderer mindful of misery, / Grievous disasters, and
death of kin" (Kennedy 5–7). This flashback provides background information for the readers that is
necessary to understand what is happening through the rest of the poem. The next literary device
appears in the second stanza of the poem: "Over wintry seas, seeking a gold–lord" (Kennedy 23).
"Gold–lord" is a kenning in this line, and it is meant to point out the fact that the wanderer is hoping
that his life will return to how it was before; however, it is too unrealistic, just as finding a "gold–
lord" or perfect king would be impossible. Alliteration is used to highlight the wanderer's feelings
during his time of exile: "Fettered my feelings, far from my kin, / Homeless and hapless" (Kennedy
19–20). By using alliteration only for certain phrases, the author makes those phrases stand out to
the reader. These particular lines were important because they portrayed the narrator's emotion and
establish the uneasy mood in the
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Empathy And Irony In William Stafford's Poem
People do not have the same destinies. However, though one can not easily understand another
completely, individuals see their futures, even when their "thread" gets tangled like a jar of jewelry.
Especially during the high school ages, young people are constantly ask about their futures, and
although it is in good nature, the wanderer tends to overstep and misunderstand. The first half of the
poem appears to speak to an individual's plan: the attachment to the thread, the necessary
explanation, the questions. Then, the second half seems to connect to the unalterable stream of life.
As Stafford writes, "you don't ever let go of the thread," the poem feels more like a death sentence.
Regardless of this, the poem still fastened to one's tactics ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Intuition has been a strong factor in my plans for after high school and it can be confusing for
another to understand. It is true, "threads" are unknowable to outsiders. However, empathy is a way
around the barrier. No one needs to understand everything, but humans need to be less narrow
minded for everyone to flourish. The title is an unqualified fact of life. Using simplistic words, the
title becomes matter–of–fact. After reading the poem, one would assume the title should include the
word "thread" because of how symbolic it is throughout the work. Stafford knows this feeling is
universal; the title indicates the reader will understand. Throughout the poem, the tone remains
unvarnished, playing to the logical side of the issue. People will always misunderstand others– this
is the way it is.
By writing "The Way It Is" is second person, Stafford further explores the universal aspect of
explanation. In certain instances, one might think in second person, as possibly reassurance or
motivation. Once one disassociates themselves from montra, it can become more powerful, in a
way. This poem is able to speak to every individual reading it because this is how humans have
broad ideas. There is a unique relationship between the narrator and the reader, when second person
is used. Because second person is used, the reader begins to assume the narrator is an omnipotent
being; they
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The Wanderer Essay
In Anglo–Saxon culture blood feud was a common occurrence and if left unchecked could leave an
entire area devoid of people that once called it home due to infighting. To avoid furthering conflict
one could also pay the wer–gild but if the murderer refused to pay the wer–gild they would be
exiled from their society of forced to live on their own on the fringes of civilization. The Wanderer
is from the perspective of one man who was exiled after a blood feud and this part of his story is
critical to understanding the poem within the context of the culture it was written. However The
Wanderer has a backdrop of blood feud and punishment by exile surrounding it but it is not by itself
a poem that condemns either of those things instead it contends with the idea of wyrd or fate and
how it is inescapable. "The weary mind cannot withstand wyrd" (The Wanderer ll. 15) this line very
early on in the poem states how you can not beat back fate and that it is futile to try. The wanderer
when he ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Using this avenue of discussion the author explains that wyrd is an all powerful force that works
like the sea and is unrelenting in its force and no one is powerful enough to stand against it.
Furthermore he goes on to say that not only is no one powerful enough to stand against it but
regardless of who you are, you stand to be affected by it because its ultimate goal is to leave the
world standing empty. Especially near the end of the poem it states how all the warriors were swept
away by wyrd along with all the other worldly goods the speaker of the poem has grown
accustomed to and loved. The poem acts as an avenue for the discussion of how wyrd was pervasive
in the society and culture of the anglo–saxons and furthermore how it was inescapable and was
unable to be fought against. Wyrd was something you simply accepted and that's all you could
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Being A Man In The Wonderer And Beowulf
Allica Cardona
Dr. Scaggs
English 2322.102
25 September 2017
To Be or Not To Be .. a Man
Being a man during the medieval period meant a lot more than being a man in the twenty–first
century. There were certain expectations, and above all, different aspects when it came down to
what being a man was. Some things that are very evident are kinship, brotherhood, male–to–male
relationships, and bonding. While reading The Wonderer and Beowulf, it is very easy to pick out
spots where these different aspects are shown. So, how exactly do we know how these acts are being
portrayed?
While reading Beowulf, right off the back the reader can get a sense of what being a man means.
There is a bond of unity from the very beginning. Brotherhood and kinship go hand in hand because
even though Beowulf did not need any help from the men who traveled with him, they all stood by
him and were there for moral support. The relationships between men seemed like they were a lot
more important, than those with women. Not only are women rarely mentioned during this time, but
when they were, they were often portrayed as damsels in distress. This is where kinship and
brotherhood go hand in hand. Just because these men were not of the same bloodline, that did not
make them any less of a family. There was always constant support, especially for Beowulf, and no
one ever really went against each other.
The bonding between men can be seen in two different ways in Beowulf. One way it can be seen is
the fact
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Mood Of Homeless Wanderer
"Hopeless Wanderer"
Analysis of mood and tone:
The tone of this song is a mixture of solemn, fear, lost and personal. The speaker is utterly
expressing the fear of his commitment through his protectiveness of his feelings and being hurt once
before. He begins the song off with "Left a clouded mind and a heavy heart but I am sure we could
see a new start" which blatantly expresses his personal experience of being left with a broken heart
and a foggy mental state of mind, but he knows that they can try once again to make it work which
is optimistic. He repeats "But hold me fast, hold me fast 'cause i'm a hopeless wanderer" which
shows the speaker being solemn and lost and needing help. The song is very aggressive due to the
speaker trying to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
From the very beginning of the song the audience can get a feeling of someone not being entirely
happy just from how slow and faint the instruments start. It also feels cold when "But in the dark I
have no name" is said because this means that in the dark there is blankness. When we do not look
deep into the meaning of the words, it makes this song appeal as if it is any other song you hear
when you are in a great and chill mood. When the banjo picks up on the aggressive repeating parts,
it makes the song neutral and almost a little bit easier to take as well as a bit fun and upbeat to sing
along with and also become stuck in your memory to where you sing it nonstop. By the end of the
song the speaker makes the audience feel him not wanting to give up especially when this is said
"Now how I long, how I long to grow old." When he repeats many parts of the song you get a sense
of hope that he now is sticking with what he believes. The song ends with making the audience feel
happy that in the very beginning "Shelter also gave their shade" was used to explain being protected
or guarded from rain, sun and anything that had to do with actually living life but in the end the
speaker sings "I will learn to love the skies i'm under" which shows that the speaker is not afraid to
live his life in good or bad days or whatever inevitable day the sky holds and to live his life to the
fullest in love. The ending leaves the audience with
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Similarities Between The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament
Throughout history many individuals participate in exile due to civil war, politics, and poverty. The
Seafarer, The Wanderer, and The Wife's Lament all contain verses of fate, loneliness and exile. The
three poems are very similar, but at the same time contain contradictory ideas. . The three poems
ranging from a lonely man, to a lost soldier, to a wife's bed rail. The Anglo–Saxon poems show hurt,
confusion, and loneliness. You must be asking yourself, how do these poems link? Within The
Seafarer, he mourns for the sea when he is on land, but seeks safety in his homeland while he is in
cruising the ocean waves. In line's 23–30 lines' states the following, "Storm beat on the rocky cliffs
and were echoed by icy–feathered tern and the eagle's screams; no kinsman could offer comfort
there, to a soul left drowning in desolation. And who could believe, knowing but the passion of
cities, swelled proud with wine and no taste of misfortune, how often, how easily, I put myself back
on the paths of the sea." This represents a classic theme of isolation and longing for the near future,
the light at the end of the tunnel. "Golden shakes the wrath of God, for a soul overflowing with sin,
and nothing hidden on earth rises to Heaven. We all fear God. He turns the earth. He set it swinging
firmly in space. Gave life to the world and light to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It looks like she had a more than a friendly acquaintance with her lord. So, the King's man plotted to
separate her. She is forcing to leave her land and travel to the unknown by herself. "The valleys are
dark the hills high the yard overgrown butter with briars a joyless dwelling. Full of the lack of my
lord seizes me cruelly here. Friends there are on earth living beloved lying in bed." Every day she
goes under the oak tree to weep her exile. She has hopes that soon she will be loved again because it
reminds her of a happy
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Essay Comparing The Seafarer And Wife's Lament
The Anglo Saxon period of time was filled with a great deal of grief and lament. There were various
kinds of writings about individuals facing arduous times in their lives. The poems "The Seafarer",
"The Wanderer", and the "Wife's Lament" are all examples of different pieces of writing of the
Anglo Saxon period. Some of the poems focused on certain dispute, while the others included a
wide variety of subject matter including religious beliefs. All of the poems are considered to be
elegies expressing the sadness and sorrow over a loss or death. Each poem includes fatalism, and
how they were each forced to experience it throughout their lives. Fatalism is the idea that humans
are powerless to change the fact they will one day die. The Anglo Saxon belief in both God and ...
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The first idea is how God is related to the concept of fate, a force that determines the death of an
individual. The second idea of God is how God is the well known creator of the world and does
everything in his power to show us his strength. "The Seafarer" was about a husband who
voluntarily exiled out into the cold, North sea. His wife disagreed with his voyages because she was
frightened he was going to approach death. The seafarer enjoyed departure because he did not have
to deal with men on the island, who certainly did not act like how men once did. He also felt he had
to devote himself out into sea, as he saw sailing was his avocation and a part of his Christian belief.
The Seafarer believed in fate, not God, determines the life of a man; though he did have faith in
Christian afterlife. He believed there was no way to prepare man for the end of his life except the
power of fate, which according to his point of view was the same as Christian afterlife. The
Seafarer's life and death reduces by sickness, age, or warfare. It does not matter if you were
successful in life, because everyone ends up going to the grave regardless over
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The Wanderer And The Wife's Lament Analysis
The Wanderer and The Wife's Lament Journal
In this week, the document that I read is The Wanderer and The Wife's Lament. While reading this
document, I was surprised by the husband's action that he abandoned his wife in his heartache.
The reason that the woman and her husband married was to make peace instead of love; however,
they still loved each other after marrying and swore that nothing could separate them excepted the
death (Anonymous 114). For me, the husband abandoned his wife because of his relative's hostility
to her and the principle of the feudal society at that time (Anonymous 114). I do not agree with that
action. If he loved her, he had to trust her and protect her. Besides that, the women in the society of
Old English were the
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Materialism In Wlf And Eadwacer
The poem Wulf and Eadwacer displays a number of typical characteristics associated with the genre
of the Old English Elegies. In this essay I aim to identify such defining characteristics and discuss
why, from Paul Muldoon's translation, Wulf and Eadwacer is in every sense an Old English Elegy. I
will examine the environment in which the poem is set, the theme of social isolation, the 'lif is laene'
motif, the 'ubi sunt' lamentation and the medieval concept of 'wyrd'. I will highlight and support
with examples how each of these features are present themselves and their significance in the
classification of this poem as an Old English Elegy.
A key feature of Medieval writing is the environment in which the poem is set. This gives the ...
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The poem is a mere nineteen lines in length and in some academic opinions is more like a riddle
than an elegy, but as Anne L. Klinck says in 'The Old English Elegies: A Critical Edition and Genre
Study', "Indeed, the poem's riddling quality is an essential ingredient, although it has far greater
cogency as a love–lament". The unnamed speaker seen in the poem is held in common with the
elegies 'The Wanderer' and 'The Seafarer' and is yet another aspect affirming the poems
classification as an Old English
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Comparing The Wanderer And The Boulevard Of Broken Dreams
The poem, "The Wanderer" and "The Boulevard Of Broken Dreams" can be compared because
they're closely similar. each of the songs form a mood of being alone in one place. Even though
they're set during a totally different life they each provide the thought of a human's feelings of being
alone in an abandoned place,
The Wanderer goes on to recall the hardships he has featured in his life, like observing his kinsmen
ruined and even slaughtered. He is aware of that whereas he's lonely and isolated, he can have
confidence these items perpetually. there's no living person with whom the Wanderer will share
what's in his heart. He is aware of that it's dignified for a person to stay his feelings to himself. He
then argues that despite ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
he's keeping his feelings to himself as there's nobody to share them with. He follows a road and has
no plan wherever it leads; therefore, it's like the wanderer as they each feel isolated during a world
wherever nobody shares they are heart.
Also, the most character within the Wanderer says that everybody who has been a unwanted exile is
aware of however miserable it's once sorrow is your solely friend. rather than receiving gold or
fame, this person experiences solely the trail of exile and a frozen body. The unwanted exile
remembers higher times partying within the mead–hall, eating among friends and together with his
lord. however currently the great times area unit over. Comparing this with the song the most
character had smart times with family and friends, and rousing he is aware of he's on his method
back alone, however doesn't recognize wherever he's headed. He had a moment wherever somebody
wasn't a friendly kind. currently on balance the partying is over he has nothing or no one to be with.
Within the Wanderer the character says "A man should hold back, showing emotion stable, and
careful concerning what he says a person should not be weak, foolish,
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Exile In Beowulf
The halls regaled in Old English Literature were safe havens for lords, warriors and clansmen alike,
the halls had a complex association with the self in these times. Exile was equivalent to certain
death to the Anglo–Saxons; they were without protection from their lord or their clan and were
wandering without a sense of belonging.
In 'The Wanderer' the theme of exile as a type of hell is apparent from the poet's narration of the
wanderer's internal monologue. He laments how he is forced to 'travel the exile's path' (Crossley–
Holland, line 5, pp.50) after his lords death and how he is perpetually alone without any kinsmen by
his side. He reflects upon the joy of his old hall asking, "where has the horse gone? Where the man?
Where the giver ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
To paraphrase Thomas Shippey in 'Bloom's Guides: Beowulf', "mead halls are a place of happiness
and full of light; whereas monsters are creatures that have to be covered by darkness" (Shippey).
Those who seek safety within the walls of the hall shall be protected for the monsters that dwell
beyond. Heaven is a place often portrayed as being bathed in light much like the halls in Old
English literature, while exile is more closely aligned with the Christian idea of hell, a dark place
void of protection and companionship. Continuing with Beowulf, characters can also be used as
modes to convey this message. The contrast between Beowulf and Grendel is almost as opposite as
the halls and exile or Heaven and Hell. Beowulf is celebrated and a great protector of those who
follow behind him, bathed in the light of the halls he spends time in. While Grendel is exiled with
only his mother for companionship and hides in the cloak of darkness, always stalking unable to
withstand the light of the halls. Stanley Baldwin touches on this idea in his companion book,
'CliffsNotes; Beowulf', he describes Heorot as "it is a place of light, warmth, and joy, contrasting
with Grendel's morbid swamp as well as the dark and cold of winters in Scandinavia" (Baldwin,
pp.76). The idea of the hall as a sort of heaven like structure is explored in Bede's 'Ecclesiastical
History of the English People' he talks of a sparrow flying through a hall in a winter's storm,
"...While inside, he is safe from the winter storms; but after a few moments of comfort, he vanishes
from sight into the wintery world from which he came" (Bede et al., pp.130–131). Elaborating on
Bede's imagery while enclosed in the hall you are ensured of good cheer and protection and in
contrast outside you are open to the world's elements and monsters of ill
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Comparing The Seafarer And The Wanderer
Looking at these two poems– considered to be sister poems– I have found distinct similarities and
differences. In The Seafarer, an old man is reflecting upon his life as a sailor. He described his
personal burdens of being on sea but he does find beauty in it. But as in The Wanderer, a warrior is
upon the ocean searching for comfort as he mourns the loss of his loved ones and society. It is well
understood that they have the feeling of loneliness in common as well as the importance in sharing a
connection with God. But there are differences as well, such as The Wanderer is repining and The
Seafarer is looking back on the times he now sees as desirable. Yet as reading these poems, I have
found more similarities than differences.
First, a similar connection these two poems share is the theme of loneliness. In The Seafarer it said,
"No kinsman could offer comfort there, to a soul left drowning in desolation (Seafarer, 25–25)." By
his description of "drowning in desolation,"it could be interpreted as suffocating with devastation,
no one can soothe his lonely soul. Corresponding to The Wanderer, "My heart has closed on itself,
quietly learning ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In this quote from The Seafarer you'll see the narrator is talking in past tense. "How wretched I was,
drifting through winter on an ice–cold sea, whirled in sorrow, alone in a world blown clear of love,
hung with icicles (Seafarer 14–18)," The Seafarer is reflecting on his life wanting to return to the sea
despite his misery. In The Wanderer the narrator is blackened, talking about how he is in need of
benefaction, "Grey with mourning. Once there were men to whom my heart could hurry, not with
open longing. They're long since dead (Wanderer 9–11)." The Wanderer witnessed destruction
through his life and is in deep sorrow thinking about it whereas The Seafarer is pondering about his
hardlines but the grace of the
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What Is The Difference Between Beowulf And The Wanderer
Time is something that humanity has not been able to conquer. Specifically, John Niles says that
"time and an indifferent fate blot out even the most glorious of human achievements." He means
that one person's accomplishments and material rewards will eventually be forgotten over time and
thus mean nothing. This concept of time as an eraser can be seen in both Beowulf and "The
Wanderer" where the past is diminished into a shadow of what it once was before eventually being
forgotten.
In Beowulf, there are many instances where the poet will convey how ephemeral a man's
achievements in life can be after he is taken by death. Beowulf tells Hrothgar, "For every one of us,
living in this world/ means waiting for our end. Let whoever can/ win glory before death. When a
warrior is gone,/ that will be his best and only bulwark" (Beowulf Ln 1386–9). Beowulf says that
glory won in life only matters to the warrior after he is dead, and no amount of riches or wealth can
help him in the afterlife. The warrior fades from the cultural memory until he is totally forgotten.
Hrothgar reminds Beowulf of this later in the poem, "Do not give way to pride./ For a brief while
your strength is in bloom/ but it fades quickly...and death will arrive,/ dear warrior, to sweep you
away" (Beowulf Ln 1760–8). Hrothgar warns Beowulf that his strength and prowess will not last
long and when they fail, so too will his legend fade over time. The king says that Beowulf should
focus on more spiritual rewards than material ones since the material gains will eventually wither or
be no help to him in the afterlife. After death, time and fate will take away his legend and then his
achievements will be meaningless. At the end of the poem, Beowulf speaks his last words to Wiglaf
as he realizes what death has done to his clan. "You are the last of us, the only one left/ of the
Waegmundings. Fate swept us away,/ sent my whole brave high–born clan/ to their final doom,"
(Beowulf Ln 2813–6). Fate sent death to Beowulf's clan and with his death, the clan will fall into
obscurity over time and eventually be forgotten. The Beowulf poet shows in many places how easy
it is for death, and through it time and fate, to wipe out any trace of man's achievements.
The
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Archetypes In Middle Class
Throughout these past few years the people in my high school class, including myself, have begun
to change and develop into who we are today. Each person changes, in and out of certain
personalities or archetypes, at their own pace. However, it appears as though each classmate, at one
point or another, has gone through each of these three archetypes: the innocent, the everyman, and
the wanderer. The archetype that had typically shown up first was the innocent. As I recall, the
innocent type personality had shown up when we were young, perhaps in the early grades in
elementary school. The innocent would describe an individual who wants to simply be happy and to
achieve their happiness, they constantly try to do the right thing no matter the ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
From experience, it seems as though the everyman doesn't really know who they are and what they
want to be. So, as a result of being so undefined, one will try to define themselves as what
everybody else seems to be; basically becoming one of the crowd. Giving this a specific age to
associate this with, the age would have to be a pre–teen or late elementary and early middle school.
The awkward stages of the twelve and thirteen–year–old girl that was Kayla were particularly
callous and unsympathetic. This stage for my class was simply about fitting into a cruel and
judgmental group of people. As a result, instead of celebrating and admiring our differences, any
particular individual would bury the uniqueness within themselves and mask their own personality
with the one that was accepted. Then, by becoming the accepted, my classmates and I had become
the everyman. Thankfully, though, the harsh unforgiving environment of middle school would
transition into the inviting and extraordinary place that is high school; where differences are
celebrated by the upperclassman which blazes the trail for the underclassman to follow. The
transition into high school was typically the time where my class and I had, for the most part,
discarded the everyman archetype for at least a short while, and became
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Compare And Contrast The Wanderer And To Penshurst
1. Consider carefully both The Wanderer and "To Penshurst." Do descriptions of the past have
similar qualities and effects in these two works? Why or why not? In answering this question, you
will need to consider carefully how each author invokes the past and why the past is important in
each of these texts.
P grace more idyllic nature cause synecdoche is pastoral but W is an elegy temporalities hide
loneliness bWHAT THEY DONT HAVE
Answer #1 – The Wandered versus To Penshurst:
When comparing The Wanderer and "To Penshurst," there are stark differences in the way the past is
evoked and viewed because the former is elegiac and the later is idyllic. On a basic level, The
Wanderer is a classic example of elegy because it expresses sadness over what the the Wandered has
lost as he laments for the death of an era in his life. This lamentation can been in the opening when
the Wanderer says "'Often the lone–dweller longs for relief'" (1) or "'Therefore I don't know why my
woeful / heart should not wax dark" (58–9). Essentially, the entire poem consists of the Wanderer
"waxing dark" about lost kin/wealth/loneliness and because of negativity he "longs for relief." "To
Penshurst," on the other hand, recalls glorious moments both past and present with an air of content
nostalgia. "To Penshurst's" narrator does this by actively addressing the country house through
personification and apostrophe which gives the property a sense of importance in identity. Penhurst
is nearly depicted
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparing The Wanderer And The Seafarer
One of the most tragic fates that an Anglo–Saxon man or woman could ever have to face is exile. In
the Anglo–Saxon poems such as the "The Wanderer" and the "The Seafarer", the authors experience
times of exile while sailing the oceans. They tell tales of men set out at sea, describing their life
lives filled with loneliness and complete desolation. In both poems, the setting of the rough, open
seas highlights the theme of exile and plays an integral role in representing the distance and
conflicts between the main characters and society. As they follow paths of suffering and affliction,
the ruthless seas further torment their lives, only adding to their feelings of loneliness and exile.
"The Wanderer" tells of a tragic story where he has lost ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Thus said the wanderer mindful of misery
Grievous disasters, and death of kin(3–7)
While he is at sea, the wanderer is met with harsh conditions such as the "wintry seas" and the "icy
wave". Also, the tragic loss of the man's king and comrades has left him "homeless" and "helpless",
further adding to the conflicts that he must bear. The cruel waters show no mercy and show up
wherever the man may go:
Then again surges his sorrow upon him;
And grimly he spurs his weary soul
Once more to the toil of the tossing sea. (49–51)
The seas are relentless and as they play a major role in the wanderer's journey, they exist as a
representation of his inner feelings of loneliness and exile. The setting not only acts as a
representation, but also as an instigator as it constantly causes the wanderer anguish "surges sorrow
upon him" and "spurs his weary soul". Similarly, "The Seafarer" shows the ocean to be a force that
further emphasizes and worsens a man's feelings of desolation and exile. In "The Seafarer", a man
recalls his travels aboard a ship travelling the winter seas and about all the hardships and suffering
he was forced to endure. The first lines of the poem describe how deeply the setting affects the main
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Wanderer Above The Sea Of Fog Analysis

  • 1. Wanderer Above The Sea Of Fog Analysis "Don't try to change your past...it's the only truth you've got" (Okhuozagbon). The past can be an interesting thing – then again, so can the future. This suggests the painting, Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog by Caspar David Friedrich. In the painting, a lone man standing on a crag of rocks overlooking the sea. His left foot faces the sea and is higher than his right. His slender cane sits on a third point on the rocks. His blonde hair is flopping in the sea breeze, but his long, green, pleated at the bottom coat is unaffected. His green pants are swaying in the wind. The sea looks to be angled downwards with the man in the center. There are at least three more visible outcroppings of rocks in the sea. Two on his left, and two on his right, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... On the right, near the mountains, there is almost a rock tower of sorts. A fog of sea spray somewhat obscures the view. The man seems lost and contemplative. His face is not visible, but his posture indicates that he is thinking, about what, may never be known but perhaps it is the future. The message seems to be that of contemplation about the future. The sea is an open expanse of water with partially visible mountains in the distance. Fog obscures some of the view, except for the outline of the mountains. The mountains are the end goal, the sea a path, and the fog is the unknown. The man does not know what the fog obscures but knows that there are mountains in the distance. The fog is the unknown of his future, the rocks his obstacles, the mountains are his outcome, and the water is his path to that outcome or goal. The message of his painting is to demonstrate the unknowns of a person's future and the possible ways it could come out. The man could become trapped on one of the rock crags or arrive at a different mountain than he thought that he was, but that is the beauty of his future – it is unknown. An open, unknown future can be a beautiful ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Analysis Of The Lament Of The Old Woman Of Beare "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare", an Early Irish poem, is from the point of view of an old woman who has begun to reflect on her life. "The Wanderer", is spoken by a bard who has been sent into exile after the death of his Lord. While in exile he begins to review his life, miss everything he has lost and look at life on a more spiritual level. Both speakers are experiencing what it feels like to be lonely because the people that were once there for them have either left or they have passed away. With a melancholic and nostalgic tone, both poems express the idea that people, youth, and the material world are all transient. However, both poems acknowledge that although the pleasures and good things in life are fleeting, the solutions to the problem is God. The speaker in "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare" is feeling nostalgic, as she remembers what the world was like during her younger years. The speaker says, "I've had my time with kings, / drinking mead and wine;/ now I drink watery whey/ with wizened old women" (90–93). Here she is comparing the way she once lived to how she lives now. This example shows how she has aged because she is no longer drinking wine with young kings and having fun. Instead, she is drinking whey, a less flattering drink, with old women. While in exile, speaker of "The Wanderer" also chooses to focus on the joys that no longer exist. He has lost his family, his lord, and his home, and has no choice but to go into exile. The Wanderer questions what happened to the comforts that he used to enjoy, "Where are the seats of the feast? where are the joys of the hall?" (93). The Wanderer searches for a mead hall only to find that they are all toppled like his own, and this leads him to realize that nothing lasts forever. The decay of life joys arises in both poems. In "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare", it is youth and the people around her, and in "The Wanderer" it is friendships, family, his lord, and the comforts of his home. The Wanderer describes that earthly things will not last forever and will eventually go to waste: The wise man must realize how ghastly it will be when all the wealth of the world stands waste, as now here and there throughout this ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. The Wanderer Vs. The Seafarer In the Anglo–Saxon story "The Wanderer" the exile is self inflicted due to the narrator trying to find a new lord. Similar to the story "The Seafarer", the narrator states how lonely he is and how cold he is. The narrator exiles himself after all his kinsmen and lord are killed most likely during a fight or battle. The exile is very hard for the narrator because he is all alone. The separation from his kinsmen is the worst he has ever felt and he does not have anyone else to rely on during his journey looking for a new lord. The difference between "The Wanderer" and "The Seafarer" is that the narrator in "The Wanderer" did not choose his exile like the narrator in "The Seafarer." In the Anglo–Saxon story "The Wife's Lament", the exile ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. What Does The Wanderer Mean Regrets and Old Age The poem, "The Wanderer" describes the sorrowful life of a "lonely traveler" whose kinsmen have been slaughtered and his Lord is deceased (line 1). The Wanderer is traveling a cruel journey "sharing [his] bread with sorrow alone, an exile in every land," "friendless and poor" (lines 30–33). However, this lonely man was not physically exiled from every land for his possible wrongdoings, but he mentally exiled himself because of his old age and his regrets in life. The Wanderer proclaims that life is dark and twisted and reminders of "the endless slaughters of a bloody past" will reign until the end of time (lines 88 and 89). Throughout the poem, it is highlighted that the Wanderer is near death and, therefore, he laments ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. A New Kind of Dreaming "Conflicts and challenges cause the characters to change and grow" Introduction: Anthony Eaton's a new Kind of Dreaming helps the reader to recognise the various challenges and conflicts that cause the characters to change and grow. Anthony Eaton best expresses Jamie as an outsider that is trying to find his place in the world, while uncovering the secrets of Port Barren's shady past. This changes Jamie from an adolescent delinquent to a responsible and admirable person. Jaime develops friendships that lead him to trusting and sympathetic qualities that are unusual for him in his past of crime. Jamie faces a challenge to build a stronger relationship with Cameron, but this is an obstacle for Cameron as he tries to understand Jamie and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Having Cameron in his life changed Jamie and challenged him to become a more preferable person. Body Paragraph 2: A challenge that Jamie has to face and overcome is when he tries to have some sense of belonging to the community of Port Barren. Archie, his guardian throughout the novel, tells him his version of a dreamtime story called 'The wanderers and the lost ones'. This story challenges Jamie to think whether he is lost or a wanderer. This makes him feel responsible for finding out who is disturbing the balance and it is up to him to try and restore it. This is shown to the reader when Jamie thinks, "It was weird, no beginning, no middle, no end, no plot. And yet he couldn't shake the feeling that there was something important behind the strange words. He pondered it but couldn't make anything of it" [page 126]. The story makes Jamie wonder who he is and how he belongs in the community. This challenges him to think more about himself and what he needs to do to change and become a better person. This also made him change the way he thought about himself, it made him to thrive to do the best he can. Conclusion: Jamie faces many conflicts and challenges throughout the novel and they all have an effect that makes him change in character. Jamie's close relationship with Cameron helps him to thrive to be more confident ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Performance Analysis: Fantasy in C Major, Op. 15 (D. 760)... Performance Analysis: Fantasy in C Major, Op. 15 (D. 760) ("Wanderer" Fantasy) Schubert composed the Fantasy in C Major ("Wanderer" Fantasy) in 1822. This fantasy became a milestone in music history because it was the first time when a composer "integrated a four– movement sonata into a single movement." Schubert did so by matching the sequence of a traditional four–movement sonata (Allegro, Adagio, Scherzo, Finale) to one big sonata form (exposition, development, recapitulation, coda). This exploration opened a new era of composing romantic music because it created an expanded form with more freedom in theme. Composers in this way were granted more freedom to compose based on their personal imagination and to compose with more virtuosity. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... But still, Brendel's performance shares modern "strait" characteristics with Pollini's recording because of its accuracy from the text. It was more difficult to find recordings earlier than the 1950s, but recordings from Walter Rehberg, Edwin Fischer, Vladimir Sofronitzky and Elly Ney proved that earlier approaches to the Wanderer Fantasy were somewhat different. Their practices of this piece were marked by agogic accent, rhythmic nuance, in a way with more freedom from the romantic approach and less accuracy from the "straight" playing. The recording Walter Rehberg made in 1927 started with a quarter note equals 158 and slowed down to an eighth note equals to 55 in Adagio. Not only the range for tempo rubato was wider, but there were also agogic accent and rhythmic nuance in his playing. An example would be at bar 32 in Allegro, where Rehberg created an agogic accent by letting the chord on right hand appear slightly later (Example 3). In Adagio, Rehberg spread out some chords from bar 9 to bar 17 to emphasis the melody (Example 4). The arpeggiated chord was a trait of romantic practice and was shared by Edwin Fischer in his recording in 1934. Fischer spread out every chord as an accent on sforzando from bar 165 to 176 in Allegro (Example 5). Fischer also did not follow every dynamic mark on the score. Instead of starting with fortissimo in Presto, Fischer played a piano. This occurred at bar 277 ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. The Seafarer Rhetorical Analysis "The Wanderer" and "The Seafarer" are both elegies that reflect Christian attitudes in their own respective views. Meaning it seems that they offer two different levels off the messages being sent and how it is perceived. This essay will explain the Attitudes the Christian influence shows in each elegy. "The Seafarer" has a more explicitly Christian message in terms of the directness of the message. It talks about a man's journey and his walk through life. How he realizes that the life he is currently leading will eventually have an end. He goes on to let the reader know his accounts and how the knowledge attained allows him to put his faith in God. So rather than dwell on the flesh and what is in this current life time he focuses on his everlasting ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Analysis Of The Lament Of The Old Woman Of Beare "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare", an Early Irish poem, is from the point of view of an old woman who has begun to reflect on her life. "The Wanderer", is spoken by a bard who has been sent into exile after the death of his Lord. While in exile he begins to review his life, miss everything he has lost and look at life on a more spiritual level. Both speakers are experiencing what it feels like to be lonely because the people that were once there for them have either left or they have passed away. With a melancholic and nostalgic tone, both poems express the idea that people, youth, and the material world are all transient. However, both poems acknowledge that although the pleasures and good things in life are fleeting, the solutions to the problem is God. The speaker in "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare" is feeling nostalgic, as she remembers what the world was like during her younger years. The speaker says, "I've had my time with kings, / drinking mead and wine;/ now I drink watery whey/ with wizened old women" (90–93). Here she is comparing the way she once lived to how she lives now. This example shows how she has aged because she is no longer drinking wine with young kings and having fun. Instead, she is drinking whey, a less flattering drink, with old women. While in exile, speaker of "The Wanderer" also chooses to focus on the joys that no longer exist. He has lost his family, his lord, and his home, and has no choice but to go into exile. The Wanderer questions what happened to the comforts that he used to enjoy, "Where are the seats of the feast? where are the joys of the hall?" (93). The Wanderer searches for a mead hall only to find that they are all toppled like his own, and this leads him to realize that nothing lasts forever. The decay of life joys arises in both poems. In "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare", it is youth and the people around her, and in "The Wanderer" it is friendships, family, his lord, and the comforts of his home. The Wanderer describes that earthly things will not last forever and will eventually go to waste: The wise man must realize how ghastly it will be when all the wealth of the world stands waste, as now here and there throughout this ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. The Wife's Lament And Beowulf Comparison When it comes to exile it's being banished from your everyday way of life away from civilization. While being used in Beowulf, "The Wife's Lament", and "The Wanderer" it gives the reader a somewhat sympathetic insight of what's going on. In Beowulf, Grendel was born into exile because of his family evil doings. "The Wife's Lament" is separated from her lover and banished to exile to live without her lover. In "The Wanderer" a battle begins and he loses all of his kinsmen and then he becomes living in exile. In Beowulf the setting takes place in "The Hall of Herot". Hrothgar who is king of his people the Danes gives celebrations, treasures, and gifts to his Danes people which show bonds of kinship. The Hall of Herot represents fun, laughter, parties for the Danes. Then there is another region outside of The Hall of Herot which is the complete opposite made up of moors, wild marshes, and fog. They have a monster by the name of Grendel ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... (21–25) She was forced to live in exile with her lover, but they were separated to live in exile in two different places. She was forced to live under an oak tree in an earthen cave. However, her husband was her home and inside of him she found much joy. Now she had a new place to call home and she found no joy. She was very sad and depressed others get to enjoy and live their life with their lovers, but she couldn't. The wife is very lonely and sad so she sits under the oak tree on summer–long days and cry about being banished to exile. My beloved will suffer The cares of a sorrowful mind; he will remember Too often a happier home. Woe to the one Who must suffer longing for a loved one. (50– 53) The wife empathized with anyone who suffers from loneliness of being away from their loved one in exile. The Wanderer also has a fate similar to that of "The Wife's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. What Is The Mood Of The Seafarer The Seafarer is a elegy–style poem that depicts the suffering and the hardships of an unnamed traveler of the sea. It is notably similar to the poem from the previous lesson , The Wanderer, in the sense that most of the poem consists of the narrator sharing his misfortunes with the readers. The poem takes readers on a mental walk–through of the narrator´s "Psychological Journey" that begins with him expressing his sorrow and concludes with his realization that, despite the hardships he endures in his life at sea, he should live in gratitude to God for all that He has done. The narrator´s "Psychological Journey" undergoes several different seasons. These seasons are both emotional and literal as the climate briefly changes from Winter to Spring halfway through the poem. The narrator ´s emotional seasons begin on a fairly grim note. He introduces the readers to his harsh seafarer lifestyle that calls for extreme endurance of vicious weather and bitter cold; not to mention the emotional endurance that he struggles to maintain. In the opening line, readers catch a hint of something that, depending one´s perspective, can be interpreted as sarcasm from the narrator. Simply put, he says that his life would make a good song; the trials he faces as a seafarer, though they wear him out, could end up entertaining others. In lines 4–33 provide an ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... No seafarer is above fearing for their future. However, his realization begins in line 103 when he begins his "speech" on the importance of fearing Godd and ends the poem in an attitude of gratitude. This seems a little odd at first, that someone who started out being so sorrowful could become so thankful and content. However, this realization that God, the creator of the world, is all knowing and all powerful and loves you is a message that can comfort even the most weary of men and it is certainly something to be thankful ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Similarities Between The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament To the Anglo–Saxon people, an exile was the worst fate imaginable because their society valued companionship and loyalty. The Anglo–Saxon elegies portray sadness and mourning because of the speaker's exile, but at the same time a veiled beauty. The elegies, "The Seafarer," "The Wanderer," and "The Wife's Lament," exhibit the seemingly contrasting traits of misery and beauty. "The Seafarer" shows beauty in the contrast between the sailor's exile from youth and the joy he finds in God. The seafarer contrastingly states, "Thus the joys of God / Are fervent with life, where life itself / Fades quickly into the earth" (ll. 64–66). God's gifts, full of life, focus on the beautiful image of God's joy and everlasting life. The seafarer mourns the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... There is a perfect purity in the idea of their love lasting until they die, which shows a fierce beauty in them standing up against the cruel world together. She claims that her optimistic notion of her marriage has turned around and failed. She believes that they never had true love or even a friendship. Her tone throughout the entire poem seeps with bitterness at the betrayal of her beloved and the audacity of her husband's family to plot against their marriage. Though her tone tells a different story, her words show the perfect love in the tale of her marriage in the past. Not only is there beauty in the love of their past relationship, but also a cruel beauty in the tragedy of being separated from her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Similarities Between The Wanderer And The Dream Of The Rood Comitatus in The Wanderer and The Dream of the Rood The Wanderer and The Dream of the Rood are two Old English poems that demonstrate the link between lord and thane. This bond, also known as the comitatus, is highlighted with imagery to effectively portray the physical intimacy involved. The idea that everything is fleeting is emphasized to show the significance of the comitatus. Furthermore, the beauty of the relationship is shown by contrasting the shame that the Wanderer feels at the end of the poem to the honour and glory that is thrown upon the cross after it willingly suffers along with Christ. In all, the ideals of the comitatus during the Medieval Times are clearly advocated through the illustration of the physical intimacy, shame and honour involved in the two poems. To start off, the two poems of interest both share the central idea that everything in life is fleeting. The Wanderer is a lament on the lost ways of life. The Wanderer thinks back to the times he was free from exile. He nostalgically compares his life then to the one he has now and comes to realize how quickly the time has gone by. From lines 73 to 77, it says "The wise man must realize how ghastly it will be when all the wealth of this world stands waste, as now here and there throughout this middle–earth walls stand blasted by the wind, beaten by frost, the buildings crumpling." There is a lack of hope in this passage. The idea that things that seem concrete are very temporary is emphasized when ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. The, The Wanderer And The Seafarer In the medieval period, the Old English elegies use unnamed speakers that offer similar descriptions of devastated landscapes and immense personal hardships. However, where the unknown authors' of the Old English elegies often present smilier descriptions and themes across their respective works, they do not present similar opinions on larger concerns like religion and the role of community. This is a concept that is interwoven into the framework of the Old English elegies "The Wanderer" and "The Seafarer". By comparing and contrasting these two works, this paper will argue that the unnamed narrators' vivid descriptions of landscapes, circumstances surrounding their exile, and climactic perspectives on the earthly community function solely ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, where the narrator in "The Wanderer" focuses his descriptions on the abandoned and crumbling manmade landscape around him that is entirely devoid of a sense of community, the narrator in "The Seafarer" does not. Unlike the wandering narrator, the seafaring narrator focuses his descriptions of the community that is present in nature. The seafarer the utterly rejects the notion that a "sheltering family / could bring consolation for his desolate soul" (25–26). This "sheltering family" (25) that the seafaring narrator alludes to in this line is the exact form of close–knit family that the narrator in "The Wanderer" laments for desperately. While the seafaring narrator offers striking similar descriptions of the landscape being "bound by ice" (9), he does not focus on these descriptions to dwell on the loss of an earthly community. Instead, the narrator in "The Seafarer" finds the landscape that he inhabits wonderfully abundant with natural – even spiritual – elements that are commonly associated with an earthly community. In the barren landscape, the seafaring narrator discovers "the wild swan's song / sometimes served for music" (19–20) and "the curlew's cry for the laugher of men" (20–21). These vibrant and vivid descriptions of the natural world that the narrator discovers in the harsh, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament The peril of exile was a major source of anxiety in Anglo–Saxon society. The lyrics of "The Seafarer," "The Wanderer," and "The Wife's Lament" infer that the fundamental precipitate of Anglo–Saxon anxiety was the threat of exile. "The Seafarer," "The Wanderer," and "The Wife's Lament" all share the common theme of exile in the Anglo–Saxon society. The peril of exile can be an eerie topic, because it is unknown when exile will occur. Each of these poems manifests exile in diverse ways. Exile is a long stay away from home is if often enforced, but is occasionally self imposed, as it is in "The Seafarer." Whether it is enforced or self imposed, exile has caused apprehension for plenty because it is the fear of the unknown. Exile can occur ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Similar to "The Wanderer," in "The Wife's Lament," the wife experiences a friendless exile after her husband or "lord" sets out on a journey at sea, leaving her in solitary and desolated. After the husband leaves, the wife begins to experience a lonely exile. She is now all alone and does not know when or if her husband is returning. As time continues on, the wife begins to experience further exile and worry. Later, she decides she is going to depart on a journey to find the love of her life. Unfortunately, the wife is unable to rejoin her husband due to a plot by his kinsman. Because of the plot by the kinsman, she is damned to live in a hole in the ground where she experiences complete exile, as she is desolated in solitary and is forced to live with her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament Exile was a terrifying threat for the Anglo–Saxons. In that time the villages were far and few between, so exile was very serious. One who was exiled was alone and had to find their own food and shelter, which could have been very difficult for the Anglo–Saxons. Exile was a form of punishment, but sometimes it was chosen. We know exile was a major part of life in this time because many of the writings found mention it. "The Seafarer," "The Wanderer," and "The Wife's Lament" all mention exile. Each lyric tells a different experiences with exile. Although, the speakers in each lyric were exiled for different reasons they each had similar experiences. In "The Seafarer" the man tells of exile at sea. The seafarer tells how frigid and lonely being at sea is. There is nothing around except ice and water, no trees or buildings. He only hears the sounds of birds and the waves instead of the sound of people and the mead hall. It is difficult to get food and the man is often starving. It is extremely dangerous to be at sea and most people would not go willingly often. However, the seafarer chose to go to sea, he chose to go in exile. The seafarer chose exile at sea because he did not like the people he left behind on land. He feels men no longer have any pride or honor. The man ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In each of the lyrics the speakers were exiled for very different reasons, but one feeling they all shared was sadness. The man in "The Seafarer" was sad and disappointed because the way men were not acting they same way men had in the past. They no longer had glory or honor they way they did in the past. The man in "The Wanderer" was sad because his lord and comrades had died. Everyone can understand being sad after losing love ones. The wife in "The Wife's Lament" was sad because her husband left her. She is also sad because of her hardships with the other lover and her husband's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Love And Loss In The Wanderer's The Wanderer The major themes were mourning of the lost, enduring pain of one's heart, yearning for dear one's love, and putting time as a fault for these grievances. In The Wanderer, the man mourns for his former position of a warrior who had a great lord, friends, and joy. He sought for comfort and a companion –– "One acquainted with pain understands how cruel a traveling companion sorrow is for someone with few friends at his side" (line 29–31)–but he soon forces himself to endure pain by stating that "A wise man must be patient, not too hot of his heart nor hasty of speech...A man should hold back his boast until ... when he truly knows to direct his heart on the right path" (line 65– 72) and " A good man holds his words back, tells his woes not too soon, baring his inner heart before knowing the best way, an eorl who acts with courage" (line 112–113). He then blames the time by stating that his friends disappeared so suddenly from his life like seagulls flying away from shifting waves (line 45–48). Similarly, in The Wife's Lament, she mourns for her husband who became separated with her because of exile. She also forces herself to endure the pain –"If ever anyone should feel anguish, harsh pain at heart, she should put on a happy appearance while enduring endless sorrow..." (line 42–45). She stated: " A happy pair we had promised each other, that death alone would ever divide us, and nothing else" (line 21–23), but "All that is changed; our nearness once is now as though it never had ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. The Battle Between Grendel And Beowulf Carl Van Clausewitz once said, "Courage, above all things, is the first quality of a warrior." In a culture where being a warrior is a very integral part of everyday lives, having courage is a key component of social survival. To have courage means to be able to defend a kingdom by every means possible. It means protecting and ascertaining the wellbeing of the people within one's own kingdom. And above all, courage means remaining loyal to one's king, regardless of the circumstance. This is the warrior culture that Beowulf in Beowulf was a part of successfully as a thane, and the same warrior culture that leads the narrator in The Wanderer to lament past memories. In Beowulf, the fight between Grendel and Beowulf was certainly a nail–biter. In this fight, however, Beowulf shows his courage by doing his absolute best at defending the kingdom by taking on this gruesome monster. Grendel was wreaking havoc on the kingdom to no end. He was killing many and terrorizing the citizens greatly. When Beowulf heard of this, as a courageous thane, he stepped in to try to stop this and protect the people. "Hygelac's kinsman kept [Grendel] helplessly locked in a handgrip. As long as either lived, he was hateful to the other. The monster's whole body was in pain; a tremendous wound appeared on his shoulder. Sinews split and the bone–lappings burst. Beowulf was granted the glory of winning; Grendel was driven under the fen–banks, fatally hurt, to his desolate lair (Lines ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. The Wife's Lament And The Seafarer In the Anglo–Saxon epic poems "The Wife's Lament," "The Wanderer," and "The Seafarer," the authors make their poetry much more interesting and enjoyable by inserting literary devices that add meaning and cohesiveness to each line. Each poem contains multiple literary devices such as kennings, caesuras, and imagery. These tools work together in order to add mood and transparency to the poetry. "The Wife's Lament," translated by Ann Standford, uses numerous literary devices to convey the pain and emotion of an exiled wife. The author of the poem uses a metaphor to compare the cave the wife has moved into to an empty hall, "under an oak tree in this den in the earth. / Ancient this earth hall." (Stanford 28–9). Comparing the cave to an empty hall shows the loneliness and isolation the abandoned wife is feeling. Another device used by the author in "The Wife's Lament" is juxtaposition. In lines 42–43, the author writes, "May that young man be sad–minded always / hard his heart's thought" (Stanford). This transition from the wife to her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the lines 8–9, the author of the poem uses a metaphor to compare icy bands to frozen chains. This creates an image in the readers' minds by suggesting that the ice around the sailor's feet is holding him down as if it was a chain. The author continues creating a picture in the minds of readers when he uses a kenning to create a new description for hail: "Frost bound the earth and hail would fall, / The coldest seeds" (Raffel 33). This kenning serves to provide an alternate view and allude to the freezing weather conditions the narrator faces. Next, the author of "The Seafarer" uses repetition with the word "so" in lines 40–41 and "no" in lines 44–45. This repetition exaggerates the seafarer's misery by making it seem like he has wasted opportunity and failed to acquire anything of value in his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Similarities Between The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament The poems "The Seafarer," "The Wanderer," and "The Wife's Lament" are all similar because they all involve exile. Exile means leaving all your family, friends and a place once grown up in. Now if someone were to leave their country, friends, and family, how would they might feel? Many would probably say it sucks. In this paper I am going to be talking about the three poems and telling the fervent of them. In the "Seafarer" the picture shows the people being in the ocean trying to go a direction. The poem of the "Seafarer" is about the man leaving his life to go sail and fish. On page 19 line 1 it says, "It tells how the sea took me, swept me back and forth in sorrow and fear and main, showed me suffering in a hundred ships, in a thousand ports, and in me." That explains how he feels about his situation, it's the starting of trying to get his point across. "The Wanderer" picture shows, a storm going and the waves hitting a rock. Acting as the grievous feelings of the person. "The Wanderer" is about the compassionate he leaves to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... On page 23 line 18 it says, "So have I also, often in the wretchedness fettered my feelings, far from my kin, homeless and hapless, since days of old, when the dark earth covered my dear lord's face, and I sailed away with sorrowful heart, if far or near lived one to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Values Of Christianity And Paganism In 'The Wanderer' Most scholars think "The Wanderer" first appeared as a piece of oral poetry during the 5th or 6th century, a time when the Germanic Pagan culture of Anglo–Saxon England was undergoing a conversion to Christianity. It contains traces of both traditional Germanic warrior culture and of a Christian value system. The speaker for much of the poem is a warrior who has had to go into exile after the slaughter of his lord and relatives in battle. Now, he contemplates what the experience of the exile teaches him about life. For most of the poem, the speaker expresses traditional Germanic beliefs about how a wise man should act, the inevitability of death, and mankind's inability to change his fate. The poem is bookended, though, by the Christian idea of the possibility of God's favor and grace, which the speaker holds up as the only possible refuge from all the misery he witnesses. The relationship between fate – in Old English, wyrd – and God's grace is not clear in the poem; the presence of both might be evidence of "The Wanderer's" position at the meeting point of Christianity and Paganism. "The Wanderer" is both a lament for all the things the speaker – and people more generally – have lost, and also a reflection on what wise men learn from their life experiences. With this dynamic duo, "The Wanderer" combines parts of two traditional genres of Old English poetry: the elegy, or lament, and the wisdom poem. These two genres aren't unrelated, since Anglo–Saxon poets believed that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Comparing Wanderer, The Wife's Lament And The Seafarer Exile is commonly seen in Anglo–Saxon literature, specifically the poems: The Wanderer, The Wife's Lament, and The Seafarer. All three poems deal with the idea of losing something and missing the something so much it pains them to think about it. Although in many cases, the person experiencing exile has nothing to do but think about their exile. In The Wanderer, the speaker has lost all of his kinsman over time. He feels exiled by his "misery, grievous disasters, and death of kin" and he is "weary of exile." It is physically straining for him to feel this way everyday, but he cannot do anything about it. He recounts how some of his companion's died saying "one a bird bore over the billowing sea; one the grey wolf slew; one a grieving earl ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She is sent to live underneath an oak tree in the middle of the woods and must bear her husband's anger everyday. In the first stanza, the woman says the pain she feels now is much more painful than anything else she has felt in her life. "I a woman tell what griefs I had since I grew up new or old never more than now." This is the woman's form of exile. "Often we vowed that but death alone would part us two naught else." When her and her husband first got married she believed they would never be parted, but circumstances got in the way. Her husband's kinsman plotted to separate them and succeeded. She misses not only her loved one, but also her young naivety about love. "I grieved each dawn wondered where my lord my first on Earth might be." She feels thrown away without her love beside her and remembers each morning at dawn. She says her old friends are sleeping soundly in their beds and she is walking by herself alone "through these earth halls." She describes the place she is exiled to as dark and overgrown from lack of care, which can be used to describe how she feels as well. She ends the lyric by wishing her husband to feel the same pain she feels everyday. "He remembers too often a happier ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Critical Appreciation Of The Poem The Wanderer Response to Literature: The Wanderer The Wander is an Elegy–style poem that depicts the suffering, exile, and memoirs of an anonymous narrator who refers to himself differently according to what part of his life he is sharing; a "Lone–dweller", an "Earth–stepper", and the "wise man and the Warrior". Although, there is still a lot of debate on whether or not there was only one narrator throughout the poem. The Wanderer is believed to have been created around the 5th or 6th century, being orally "handed down" from generation to generation. However, it was actually written down in the 10th century. It was then duplicated in the Exeter book, the biggest manuscript collection of Old English poetry in existence, by scribes and is preserved ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It´s also believed that the "earth– stepper" and this unspecified narrator are one in the same. These lines consist of the narrator´s description of not only the ideal wise man, but also the ideal warrior. The placement of these ideas is interesting. The narrator begins his descriptions of the ideal wise man and warrior shortly after monologuing about his suffering and solitude. The Earth–stepper´s testimony segues into the description of the Wise man. It´s as if the narrator has goes through a short phase of introspection. (the wise man is also mentioned several times between line ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Psychotic Break In The Wanderer In "The Wanderer", the speaker tells us about the events of an attack on his town and people. He is the only person that makes it through. Longing for a reconnection to human life, he travels through empty lands looking to replace his dead lord, kinsmen, and friends. The only connection he has to human life along this journey are his memories. Solitude makes the speaker believe that all things on earth come to a tragic end. The poem "The Wanderer" by Anglo–Saxons is about social isolation and reveals a psychotic break. Essentially, the speaker's psychotic break originates from three main things that happen to him. The first event, that started his decline in mental health, is the war that wiped out his people. According to NAMI, "A traumatic event such as a death, war or sexual assault can trigger a psychotic episode" (Early Psychosis). The speaker tells us that he has gone through both war and many deaths. The next element that contributes to his deterioration is his ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... On several occasions, the speaker tells the reader about his hallucinations. For instance, he says " Sometimes it seems I see my lord, / Kiss and embrace him..." (110). Seeing and touching his lord is an example of not only visual hallucination but also a kinesthetic hallucination. The speaker using the word sometimes at the beginning of the sentence signifies this wasn't a one–time occurrence. In the article Early Psychosis and Psychosis, it states that psychotic breaks typically involve hallucinations (Early Psychosis). In addition, the speaker says "Everything earthly is evilly born,..." (111). The reader can infer that the speaker believes all things are malicious and against him. In other words, the speaker is paranoid. As reported by Nall, paranoia is an example of a psychotic symptom (Nall). Paranoia coupled with hallucinations illustrate to the reader that the speaker is experiencing a psychotic ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Comparing The Wife's Lament And The Seafarer In the Anglo–Saxon epic poems "The Wife's Lament", "The Wanderer", and "The Seafarer", the authors make their poetry much more interesting and enjoyable by inserting literary devices that add meaning and cohesiveness to each line. Each poem contains multiple literary devices such as kennings, caesuras, and imagery. These tools work together in order to add mood and transparency to the poetry. "The Wife's Lament" is a poem that was translated by Ann Standford, and it uses numerous literary devices to convey the pains and emotions being felt by the narrator, an exiled wife. The author of the poem uses a metaphor to compare the cave the wife has moved into to an empty hall: "under an oak tree in this den in the earth. / Ancient this eath hall." ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Kennedy, utilizes literary devices to make the plot clear and organized, while also adding imagery to the poem. The first example of this is the flashback used in the first paragraph: "Homeless and helpless he fled from fate / Thus saith the wanderer mindful of misery, / Grievous disasters, and death of kin" (Kennedy 5–7). This flashback provides background information for the readers that is necessary to understand what is happening through the rest of the poem. The next literary device appears in the second stanza of the poem: "Over wintry seas, seeking a gold–lord" (Kennedy 23). "Gold–lord" is a kenning in this line, and it is meant to point out the fact that the wanderer is hoping that his life will return to how it was before; however, it is too unrealistic, just as finding a "gold– lord" or perfect king would be impossible. Alliteration is used to highlight the wanderer's feelings during his time of exile: "Fettered my feelings, far from my kin, / Homeless and hapless" (Kennedy 19–20). By using alliteration only for certain phrases, the author makes those phrases stand out to the reader. These particular lines were important because they portrayed the narrator's emotion and establish the uneasy mood in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. Empathy And Irony In William Stafford's Poem People do not have the same destinies. However, though one can not easily understand another completely, individuals see their futures, even when their "thread" gets tangled like a jar of jewelry. Especially during the high school ages, young people are constantly ask about their futures, and although it is in good nature, the wanderer tends to overstep and misunderstand. The first half of the poem appears to speak to an individual's plan: the attachment to the thread, the necessary explanation, the questions. Then, the second half seems to connect to the unalterable stream of life. As Stafford writes, "you don't ever let go of the thread," the poem feels more like a death sentence. Regardless of this, the poem still fastened to one's tactics ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Intuition has been a strong factor in my plans for after high school and it can be confusing for another to understand. It is true, "threads" are unknowable to outsiders. However, empathy is a way around the barrier. No one needs to understand everything, but humans need to be less narrow minded for everyone to flourish. The title is an unqualified fact of life. Using simplistic words, the title becomes matter–of–fact. After reading the poem, one would assume the title should include the word "thread" because of how symbolic it is throughout the work. Stafford knows this feeling is universal; the title indicates the reader will understand. Throughout the poem, the tone remains unvarnished, playing to the logical side of the issue. People will always misunderstand others– this is the way it is. By writing "The Way It Is" is second person, Stafford further explores the universal aspect of explanation. In certain instances, one might think in second person, as possibly reassurance or motivation. Once one disassociates themselves from montra, it can become more powerful, in a way. This poem is able to speak to every individual reading it because this is how humans have broad ideas. There is a unique relationship between the narrator and the reader, when second person is used. Because second person is used, the reader begins to assume the narrator is an omnipotent being; they ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. The Wanderer Essay In Anglo–Saxon culture blood feud was a common occurrence and if left unchecked could leave an entire area devoid of people that once called it home due to infighting. To avoid furthering conflict one could also pay the wer–gild but if the murderer refused to pay the wer–gild they would be exiled from their society of forced to live on their own on the fringes of civilization. The Wanderer is from the perspective of one man who was exiled after a blood feud and this part of his story is critical to understanding the poem within the context of the culture it was written. However The Wanderer has a backdrop of blood feud and punishment by exile surrounding it but it is not by itself a poem that condemns either of those things instead it contends with the idea of wyrd or fate and how it is inescapable. "The weary mind cannot withstand wyrd" (The Wanderer ll. 15) this line very early on in the poem states how you can not beat back fate and that it is futile to try. The wanderer when he ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Using this avenue of discussion the author explains that wyrd is an all powerful force that works like the sea and is unrelenting in its force and no one is powerful enough to stand against it. Furthermore he goes on to say that not only is no one powerful enough to stand against it but regardless of who you are, you stand to be affected by it because its ultimate goal is to leave the world standing empty. Especially near the end of the poem it states how all the warriors were swept away by wyrd along with all the other worldly goods the speaker of the poem has grown accustomed to and loved. The poem acts as an avenue for the discussion of how wyrd was pervasive in the society and culture of the anglo–saxons and furthermore how it was inescapable and was unable to be fought against. Wyrd was something you simply accepted and that's all you could ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Being A Man In The Wonderer And Beowulf Allica Cardona Dr. Scaggs English 2322.102 25 September 2017 To Be or Not To Be .. a Man Being a man during the medieval period meant a lot more than being a man in the twenty–first century. There were certain expectations, and above all, different aspects when it came down to what being a man was. Some things that are very evident are kinship, brotherhood, male–to–male relationships, and bonding. While reading The Wonderer and Beowulf, it is very easy to pick out spots where these different aspects are shown. So, how exactly do we know how these acts are being portrayed? While reading Beowulf, right off the back the reader can get a sense of what being a man means. There is a bond of unity from the very beginning. Brotherhood and kinship go hand in hand because even though Beowulf did not need any help from the men who traveled with him, they all stood by him and were there for moral support. The relationships between men seemed like they were a lot more important, than those with women. Not only are women rarely mentioned during this time, but when they were, they were often portrayed as damsels in distress. This is where kinship and brotherhood go hand in hand. Just because these men were not of the same bloodline, that did not make them any less of a family. There was always constant support, especially for Beowulf, and no one ever really went against each other. The bonding between men can be seen in two different ways in Beowulf. One way it can be seen is the fact ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Mood Of Homeless Wanderer "Hopeless Wanderer" Analysis of mood and tone: The tone of this song is a mixture of solemn, fear, lost and personal. The speaker is utterly expressing the fear of his commitment through his protectiveness of his feelings and being hurt once before. He begins the song off with "Left a clouded mind and a heavy heart but I am sure we could see a new start" which blatantly expresses his personal experience of being left with a broken heart and a foggy mental state of mind, but he knows that they can try once again to make it work which is optimistic. He repeats "But hold me fast, hold me fast 'cause i'm a hopeless wanderer" which shows the speaker being solemn and lost and needing help. The song is very aggressive due to the speaker trying to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... From the very beginning of the song the audience can get a feeling of someone not being entirely happy just from how slow and faint the instruments start. It also feels cold when "But in the dark I have no name" is said because this means that in the dark there is blankness. When we do not look deep into the meaning of the words, it makes this song appeal as if it is any other song you hear when you are in a great and chill mood. When the banjo picks up on the aggressive repeating parts, it makes the song neutral and almost a little bit easier to take as well as a bit fun and upbeat to sing along with and also become stuck in your memory to where you sing it nonstop. By the end of the song the speaker makes the audience feel him not wanting to give up especially when this is said "Now how I long, how I long to grow old." When he repeats many parts of the song you get a sense of hope that he now is sticking with what he believes. The song ends with making the audience feel happy that in the very beginning "Shelter also gave their shade" was used to explain being protected or guarded from rain, sun and anything that had to do with actually living life but in the end the speaker sings "I will learn to love the skies i'm under" which shows that the speaker is not afraid to live his life in good or bad days or whatever inevitable day the sky holds and to live his life to the fullest in love. The ending leaves the audience with ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Similarities Between The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament Throughout history many individuals participate in exile due to civil war, politics, and poverty. The Seafarer, The Wanderer, and The Wife's Lament all contain verses of fate, loneliness and exile. The three poems are very similar, but at the same time contain contradictory ideas. . The three poems ranging from a lonely man, to a lost soldier, to a wife's bed rail. The Anglo–Saxon poems show hurt, confusion, and loneliness. You must be asking yourself, how do these poems link? Within The Seafarer, he mourns for the sea when he is on land, but seeks safety in his homeland while he is in cruising the ocean waves. In line's 23–30 lines' states the following, "Storm beat on the rocky cliffs and were echoed by icy–feathered tern and the eagle's screams; no kinsman could offer comfort there, to a soul left drowning in desolation. And who could believe, knowing but the passion of cities, swelled proud with wine and no taste of misfortune, how often, how easily, I put myself back on the paths of the sea." This represents a classic theme of isolation and longing for the near future, the light at the end of the tunnel. "Golden shakes the wrath of God, for a soul overflowing with sin, and nothing hidden on earth rises to Heaven. We all fear God. He turns the earth. He set it swinging firmly in space. Gave life to the world and light to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It looks like she had a more than a friendly acquaintance with her lord. So, the King's man plotted to separate her. She is forcing to leave her land and travel to the unknown by herself. "The valleys are dark the hills high the yard overgrown butter with briars a joyless dwelling. Full of the lack of my lord seizes me cruelly here. Friends there are on earth living beloved lying in bed." Every day she goes under the oak tree to weep her exile. She has hopes that soon she will be loved again because it reminds her of a happy ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Essay Comparing The Seafarer And Wife's Lament The Anglo Saxon period of time was filled with a great deal of grief and lament. There were various kinds of writings about individuals facing arduous times in their lives. The poems "The Seafarer", "The Wanderer", and the "Wife's Lament" are all examples of different pieces of writing of the Anglo Saxon period. Some of the poems focused on certain dispute, while the others included a wide variety of subject matter including religious beliefs. All of the poems are considered to be elegies expressing the sadness and sorrow over a loss or death. Each poem includes fatalism, and how they were each forced to experience it throughout their lives. Fatalism is the idea that humans are powerless to change the fact they will one day die. The Anglo Saxon belief in both God and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The first idea is how God is related to the concept of fate, a force that determines the death of an individual. The second idea of God is how God is the well known creator of the world and does everything in his power to show us his strength. "The Seafarer" was about a husband who voluntarily exiled out into the cold, North sea. His wife disagreed with his voyages because she was frightened he was going to approach death. The seafarer enjoyed departure because he did not have to deal with men on the island, who certainly did not act like how men once did. He also felt he had to devote himself out into sea, as he saw sailing was his avocation and a part of his Christian belief. The Seafarer believed in fate, not God, determines the life of a man; though he did have faith in Christian afterlife. He believed there was no way to prepare man for the end of his life except the power of fate, which according to his point of view was the same as Christian afterlife. The Seafarer's life and death reduces by sickness, age, or warfare. It does not matter if you were successful in life, because everyone ends up going to the grave regardless over ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. The Wanderer And The Wife's Lament Analysis The Wanderer and The Wife's Lament Journal In this week, the document that I read is The Wanderer and The Wife's Lament. While reading this document, I was surprised by the husband's action that he abandoned his wife in his heartache. The reason that the woman and her husband married was to make peace instead of love; however, they still loved each other after marrying and swore that nothing could separate them excepted the death (Anonymous 114). For me, the husband abandoned his wife because of his relative's hostility to her and the principle of the feudal society at that time (Anonymous 114). I do not agree with that action. If he loved her, he had to trust her and protect her. Besides that, the women in the society of Old English were the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Materialism In Wlf And Eadwacer The poem Wulf and Eadwacer displays a number of typical characteristics associated with the genre of the Old English Elegies. In this essay I aim to identify such defining characteristics and discuss why, from Paul Muldoon's translation, Wulf and Eadwacer is in every sense an Old English Elegy. I will examine the environment in which the poem is set, the theme of social isolation, the 'lif is laene' motif, the 'ubi sunt' lamentation and the medieval concept of 'wyrd'. I will highlight and support with examples how each of these features are present themselves and their significance in the classification of this poem as an Old English Elegy. A key feature of Medieval writing is the environment in which the poem is set. This gives the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poem is a mere nineteen lines in length and in some academic opinions is more like a riddle than an elegy, but as Anne L. Klinck says in 'The Old English Elegies: A Critical Edition and Genre Study', "Indeed, the poem's riddling quality is an essential ingredient, although it has far greater cogency as a love–lament". The unnamed speaker seen in the poem is held in common with the elegies 'The Wanderer' and 'The Seafarer' and is yet another aspect affirming the poems classification as an Old English ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Comparing The Wanderer And The Boulevard Of Broken Dreams The poem, "The Wanderer" and "The Boulevard Of Broken Dreams" can be compared because they're closely similar. each of the songs form a mood of being alone in one place. Even though they're set during a totally different life they each provide the thought of a human's feelings of being alone in an abandoned place, The Wanderer goes on to recall the hardships he has featured in his life, like observing his kinsmen ruined and even slaughtered. He is aware of that whereas he's lonely and isolated, he can have confidence these items perpetually. there's no living person with whom the Wanderer will share what's in his heart. He is aware of that it's dignified for a person to stay his feelings to himself. He then argues that despite ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... he's keeping his feelings to himself as there's nobody to share them with. He follows a road and has no plan wherever it leads; therefore, it's like the wanderer as they each feel isolated during a world wherever nobody shares they are heart. Also, the most character within the Wanderer says that everybody who has been a unwanted exile is aware of however miserable it's once sorrow is your solely friend. rather than receiving gold or fame, this person experiences solely the trail of exile and a frozen body. The unwanted exile remembers higher times partying within the mead–hall, eating among friends and together with his lord. however currently the great times area unit over. Comparing this with the song the most character had smart times with family and friends, and rousing he is aware of he's on his method back alone, however doesn't recognize wherever he's headed. He had a moment wherever somebody wasn't a friendly kind. currently on balance the partying is over he has nothing or no one to be with. Within the Wanderer the character says "A man should hold back, showing emotion stable, and careful concerning what he says a person should not be weak, foolish, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. Exile In Beowulf The halls regaled in Old English Literature were safe havens for lords, warriors and clansmen alike, the halls had a complex association with the self in these times. Exile was equivalent to certain death to the Anglo–Saxons; they were without protection from their lord or their clan and were wandering without a sense of belonging. In 'The Wanderer' the theme of exile as a type of hell is apparent from the poet's narration of the wanderer's internal monologue. He laments how he is forced to 'travel the exile's path' (Crossley– Holland, line 5, pp.50) after his lords death and how he is perpetually alone without any kinsmen by his side. He reflects upon the joy of his old hall asking, "where has the horse gone? Where the man? Where the giver ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... To paraphrase Thomas Shippey in 'Bloom's Guides: Beowulf', "mead halls are a place of happiness and full of light; whereas monsters are creatures that have to be covered by darkness" (Shippey). Those who seek safety within the walls of the hall shall be protected for the monsters that dwell beyond. Heaven is a place often portrayed as being bathed in light much like the halls in Old English literature, while exile is more closely aligned with the Christian idea of hell, a dark place void of protection and companionship. Continuing with Beowulf, characters can also be used as modes to convey this message. The contrast between Beowulf and Grendel is almost as opposite as the halls and exile or Heaven and Hell. Beowulf is celebrated and a great protector of those who follow behind him, bathed in the light of the halls he spends time in. While Grendel is exiled with only his mother for companionship and hides in the cloak of darkness, always stalking unable to withstand the light of the halls. Stanley Baldwin touches on this idea in his companion book, 'CliffsNotes; Beowulf', he describes Heorot as "it is a place of light, warmth, and joy, contrasting with Grendel's morbid swamp as well as the dark and cold of winters in Scandinavia" (Baldwin, pp.76). The idea of the hall as a sort of heaven like structure is explored in Bede's 'Ecclesiastical History of the English People' he talks of a sparrow flying through a hall in a winter's storm, "...While inside, he is safe from the winter storms; but after a few moments of comfort, he vanishes from sight into the wintery world from which he came" (Bede et al., pp.130–131). Elaborating on Bede's imagery while enclosed in the hall you are ensured of good cheer and protection and in contrast outside you are open to the world's elements and monsters of ill ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. Comparing The Seafarer And The Wanderer Looking at these two poems– considered to be sister poems– I have found distinct similarities and differences. In The Seafarer, an old man is reflecting upon his life as a sailor. He described his personal burdens of being on sea but he does find beauty in it. But as in The Wanderer, a warrior is upon the ocean searching for comfort as he mourns the loss of his loved ones and society. It is well understood that they have the feeling of loneliness in common as well as the importance in sharing a connection with God. But there are differences as well, such as The Wanderer is repining and The Seafarer is looking back on the times he now sees as desirable. Yet as reading these poems, I have found more similarities than differences. First, a similar connection these two poems share is the theme of loneliness. In The Seafarer it said, "No kinsman could offer comfort there, to a soul left drowning in desolation (Seafarer, 25–25)." By his description of "drowning in desolation,"it could be interpreted as suffocating with devastation, no one can soothe his lonely soul. Corresponding to The Wanderer, "My heart has closed on itself, quietly learning ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In this quote from The Seafarer you'll see the narrator is talking in past tense. "How wretched I was, drifting through winter on an ice–cold sea, whirled in sorrow, alone in a world blown clear of love, hung with icicles (Seafarer 14–18)," The Seafarer is reflecting on his life wanting to return to the sea despite his misery. In The Wanderer the narrator is blackened, talking about how he is in need of benefaction, "Grey with mourning. Once there were men to whom my heart could hurry, not with open longing. They're long since dead (Wanderer 9–11)." The Wanderer witnessed destruction through his life and is in deep sorrow thinking about it whereas The Seafarer is pondering about his hardlines but the grace of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. What Is The Difference Between Beowulf And The Wanderer Time is something that humanity has not been able to conquer. Specifically, John Niles says that "time and an indifferent fate blot out even the most glorious of human achievements." He means that one person's accomplishments and material rewards will eventually be forgotten over time and thus mean nothing. This concept of time as an eraser can be seen in both Beowulf and "The Wanderer" where the past is diminished into a shadow of what it once was before eventually being forgotten. In Beowulf, there are many instances where the poet will convey how ephemeral a man's achievements in life can be after he is taken by death. Beowulf tells Hrothgar, "For every one of us, living in this world/ means waiting for our end. Let whoever can/ win glory before death. When a warrior is gone,/ that will be his best and only bulwark" (Beowulf Ln 1386–9). Beowulf says that glory won in life only matters to the warrior after he is dead, and no amount of riches or wealth can help him in the afterlife. The warrior fades from the cultural memory until he is totally forgotten. Hrothgar reminds Beowulf of this later in the poem, "Do not give way to pride./ For a brief while your strength is in bloom/ but it fades quickly...and death will arrive,/ dear warrior, to sweep you away" (Beowulf Ln 1760–8). Hrothgar warns Beowulf that his strength and prowess will not last long and when they fail, so too will his legend fade over time. The king says that Beowulf should focus on more spiritual rewards than material ones since the material gains will eventually wither or be no help to him in the afterlife. After death, time and fate will take away his legend and then his achievements will be meaningless. At the end of the poem, Beowulf speaks his last words to Wiglaf as he realizes what death has done to his clan. "You are the last of us, the only one left/ of the Waegmundings. Fate swept us away,/ sent my whole brave high–born clan/ to their final doom," (Beowulf Ln 2813–6). Fate sent death to Beowulf's clan and with his death, the clan will fall into obscurity over time and eventually be forgotten. The Beowulf poet shows in many places how easy it is for death, and through it time and fate, to wipe out any trace of man's achievements. The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Archetypes In Middle Class Throughout these past few years the people in my high school class, including myself, have begun to change and develop into who we are today. Each person changes, in and out of certain personalities or archetypes, at their own pace. However, it appears as though each classmate, at one point or another, has gone through each of these three archetypes: the innocent, the everyman, and the wanderer. The archetype that had typically shown up first was the innocent. As I recall, the innocent type personality had shown up when we were young, perhaps in the early grades in elementary school. The innocent would describe an individual who wants to simply be happy and to achieve their happiness, they constantly try to do the right thing no matter the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... From experience, it seems as though the everyman doesn't really know who they are and what they want to be. So, as a result of being so undefined, one will try to define themselves as what everybody else seems to be; basically becoming one of the crowd. Giving this a specific age to associate this with, the age would have to be a pre–teen or late elementary and early middle school. The awkward stages of the twelve and thirteen–year–old girl that was Kayla were particularly callous and unsympathetic. This stage for my class was simply about fitting into a cruel and judgmental group of people. As a result, instead of celebrating and admiring our differences, any particular individual would bury the uniqueness within themselves and mask their own personality with the one that was accepted. Then, by becoming the accepted, my classmates and I had become the everyman. Thankfully, though, the harsh unforgiving environment of middle school would transition into the inviting and extraordinary place that is high school; where differences are celebrated by the upperclassman which blazes the trail for the underclassman to follow. The transition into high school was typically the time where my class and I had, for the most part, discarded the everyman archetype for at least a short while, and became ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Compare And Contrast The Wanderer And To Penshurst 1. Consider carefully both The Wanderer and "To Penshurst." Do descriptions of the past have similar qualities and effects in these two works? Why or why not? In answering this question, you will need to consider carefully how each author invokes the past and why the past is important in each of these texts. P grace more idyllic nature cause synecdoche is pastoral but W is an elegy temporalities hide loneliness bWHAT THEY DONT HAVE Answer #1 – The Wandered versus To Penshurst: When comparing The Wanderer and "To Penshurst," there are stark differences in the way the past is evoked and viewed because the former is elegiac and the later is idyllic. On a basic level, The Wanderer is a classic example of elegy because it expresses sadness over what the the Wandered has lost as he laments for the death of an era in his life. This lamentation can been in the opening when the Wanderer says "'Often the lone–dweller longs for relief'" (1) or "'Therefore I don't know why my woeful / heart should not wax dark" (58–9). Essentially, the entire poem consists of the Wanderer "waxing dark" about lost kin/wealth/loneliness and because of negativity he "longs for relief." "To Penshurst," on the other hand, recalls glorious moments both past and present with an air of content nostalgia. "To Penshurst's" narrator does this by actively addressing the country house through personification and apostrophe which gives the property a sense of importance in identity. Penhurst is nearly depicted ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Comparing The Wanderer And The Seafarer One of the most tragic fates that an Anglo–Saxon man or woman could ever have to face is exile. In the Anglo–Saxon poems such as the "The Wanderer" and the "The Seafarer", the authors experience times of exile while sailing the oceans. They tell tales of men set out at sea, describing their life lives filled with loneliness and complete desolation. In both poems, the setting of the rough, open seas highlights the theme of exile and plays an integral role in representing the distance and conflicts between the main characters and society. As they follow paths of suffering and affliction, the ruthless seas further torment their lives, only adding to their feelings of loneliness and exile. "The Wanderer" tells of a tragic story where he has lost ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Thus said the wanderer mindful of misery Grievous disasters, and death of kin(3–7) While he is at sea, the wanderer is met with harsh conditions such as the "wintry seas" and the "icy wave". Also, the tragic loss of the man's king and comrades has left him "homeless" and "helpless", further adding to the conflicts that he must bear. The cruel waters show no mercy and show up wherever the man may go: Then again surges his sorrow upon him; And grimly he spurs his weary soul Once more to the toil of the tossing sea. (49–51) The seas are relentless and as they play a major role in the wanderer's journey, they exist as a representation of his inner feelings of loneliness and exile. The setting not only acts as a representation, but also as an instigator as it constantly causes the wanderer anguish "surges sorrow upon him" and "spurs his weary soul". Similarly, "The Seafarer" shows the ocean to be a force that further emphasizes and worsens a man's feelings of desolation and exile. In "The Seafarer", a man recalls his travels aboard a ship travelling the winter seas and about all the hardships and suffering he was forced to endure. The first lines of the poem describe how deeply the setting affects the main ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...