So, presumably we are still in the
rather short span that is the Romantic period of British literature when
everyone was going crazy about nature and being an individual. Everything is about finding one’s self in the
peace that is the natural world, and really discovering what it means to be who
you are. Therefore, the message that
Tennyson is trying to convey in his poem “The Lotos-Eaters” seems rather odd to
me. The bulk of the poem describes the
grandeur and beauty that is the island of the Lotos-Eaters, and the image
created by such a description is practically a romanticist’s perfect
abode. “A land of streams! some, like a
downward smoke, /Slow-dropping veils of thinnest lawn, did go.” Who could imagine a more perfect place; a
land where time seems to stand at a barred gate with no hope of continuing; a
land where the impossible has and still is achieved; a land where one could be
alone for eternity? Yet, the people who
do live here are husks: empty shells of humans, with very little that makes
them human left. They chose to eat of
the lotos’s and now feel no sense of adventure, no want to return to their home
and their families, all loyalty to their captain lost. It presents a rather dreary image of the
Romantic era, and it almost seems like Tennyson is, in a way, criticizing the
hermits and naturalists of the time that love the seclusion of nature above all
else. Why he chooses to say that I know
not, but due to the fact that this land has the rather intriguing factor of
time being still, it also seems that Tennyson is perhaps also criticizing people
who refuse to allow progress in the world.
Honestly, I am really not quite sure what Tennyson is getting at, but it
definitely seems that he is perhaps not so happy with some aspect of the world
around him, but what it is exactly I cannot quite pinpoint.
Yea I think that you raise an interesting point and think that your right on. My only thought is maybe the time period has changed which could explain this more, but I guess we'll find out tomorrow. Interesting post though.
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