Monday, September 2, 2019
Illustrated in the poems The Lady of Shalott and Ulysses by Alfred Lord
Illustrated in the poems The Lady of Shalott and Ulysses by Alfred Lord   Tennyson, The Door by Mir slave Holub and The Girl in Times Square, a   novel by Paulina Simmons.     Change gives us roots; continuity gives us branches letting us stretch  and grow to reach new heights. Living as we know it wouldnââ¬â¢t exist if  change didnââ¬â¢t occur. This ability to continue changing is the only  true security we have. This is illustrated in the poems ââ¬ËThe Lady of  Shalottâ⬠ and ââ¬ËUlyssesââ¬â¢ by Alfred Lord Tennyson, ââ¬ËThe Doorââ¬â¢ by Mir  slave Holub and ââ¬ËThe Girl in Times Squareââ¬â¢, a novel by Paulina  Simmons.    Tennysonââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËThe Lady of Shalottââ¬â¢ is divided into four parts, following  a strict and consistent meter and rhyme pattern throughout. The Lady  of Shalott is a magical being who lives alone on the island of Shalott  across the river from fast paced Camelot.    The first 2 parts of the poem illustrate a place where everything  stands still. There is a severe lack in movement and The lady of  shallotââ¬â¢s surroundings appears to be idle. This is illustrated through  the bleak and dull the poem provides.. ââ¬Å"Four grey walls and four grey  towers..â⬠ ââ¬Å"And the silent isle embowersâ⬠ ââ¬Å"Slow horsesâ⬠. The uneventful  and bland introduction serves its purpose by setting the tone and mood  as a boring one, to only make the end excitingly climatic.    The first and most important change that occurs in this text is the  arrival of Sir Lancelot in Shalott. He is represented through the  imagery of flames, sun, sparkle, glitter, stars, gold, silver, shine,  burning light and glow. It was His mere presence that further sickened  The lady of Shalott of only seeing shadows and compelled her to leave  her loom. The fact that the decision to leave was hers alone, even  t...              ...result of choices  among alternate paths offered by the present, but a place that we  create using our minds and will, then in activity. The future is a  place we are creating not going to. The path is to be made not found  and through change she can achieve the most unique and fulfilling  destinations.    It is from the didactive nature of all of these texts we can conclude  that change is inevitable. Change can be positive or negative. With  change comes responsibility, but the price is always worth what we got  for it. The emotive, descriptive language and imagery used in  Tennysonââ¬â¢s poems, symbolism and simplicity of ââ¬ËThe Doorââ¬â¢ and the  mystery of ââ¬ËThe Girl in Times Squareââ¬â¢ all profoundly affect the way I  have viewed change as a necessary element of living, making it so  simple to say that Change by itself is the most powerful agent to  growth and transformation.                      
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