English, asked by misstanyarana006, 6 months ago

How does Ulysses portray his fellow mariners and
what does he say to inspire them to strive, to seek,
to find, and not to yield'? Describe it in about 500 words​

Answers

Answered by Manoj373
6

Answer:

They are united by their undying spirit of adventure. Though death would end everything, Ulysses urges his companions to join him and sail beyond the sunset. He asks them to seek a newer world regardless of consequences. He reminds them that they have brave hearts and once they had moved the heaven and the earth.In the course of the poem, Ulysses describes his people as "a savage race, that hoard, and sleep, and feed, and know not me." Later, he expresses the thought that his son can "make mild a rugged people, and thro' soft degrees subdue them to the useful and the good." From these lines, we gather that Ulysses considers ...

Explanation:

Ulysses summons his sailors to gather at the port, where the ship is ready to sail. ... Though death would end everything, Ulysses urges his companions to join him and sail beyond the sunset. He inspires them by saying that they may have grown old and weak physically but their spirit is young and undaunted.

Answered by ravilaccs
0

Answer:

The willingness of politicians to appropriate Tennyson's lines, frequently for self-serving ends, prompts a sceptic to reevaluate the poem's final lines, which, while undoubtedly affirmative and persuasive, are also rife with uncertainty and ambiguity. Tennyson himself stated that his poem was "written under the sense of loss and that all had gone by, but that still life must be fought out to the end" and that "confidence and doubt are equal elements of its meaning." The poem's conclusion leaves open the conflict between the desire to live life to the fullest and the sense of loss.

Explanation:

  • The mariners of Ulysses are both alive and dead. His deceased friends took part in the Trojan War and disobeyed the gods. They are viewed as brave men who put their lives in danger for his benefit.
  • Although he addresses them and remembers how they used to be, his disposition toward his companions is somewhat depressing. Ulysses commends them for their courage, their maturity, and their prior accomplishments while also warning them not to lose sight of the same. He praises them for their good qualities and points out how similar the mariners are to himself. He emphasises the significance of their journey and warns the men of its potential perils. Through this, we see an old King ordering his troops to fight as hard as they can.
  • Although Ulysses is aware of his fame for heroic deeds, this is not what drives him. He has an active forward-looking spirit. Although he has seen a lot and a wide range of cultures, all of this has happened in the past. He is who he is because of his experiences, but what matters is crossing the "arch" into the "untraveled world" and steadily making progress toward the constantly vanishing horizon. Ulysses also uses the arch as a metaphor in this passage when he compares himself to a sword that must "shine in use" as opposed to "rust unburnished."

Reference Link

  • https://brainly.in/question/25704744
  • https://brainly.in/question/28835240
Similar questions