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Short summary on when i set out for lyonnesses

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Answered by prashanth1551
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HOMEWORK HELP > THOMAS HARDY

Please provide a summary of the poem "When I Set Out for Lyonnesse" by Thomas Hardy.

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CAROL-DAVIS | CERTIFIED EDUCATOR

Summary: The poem comes from Hardy's memory of a these three days in his life. Although nothing is mentioned in the poem about any of this,  it is obvious that the poet is quite excited and happy about his trip. 

Though Lyonnesse is a mythological lost land, beginning with these lines, the poem appears to take the reader on a trip:

 

When I set out for Lyonnesse,
A hundred miles away...

 

The reader learns that the trip will cover about 100 miles by train.  Initially, the poetic speaker was lonely, probably dreading his time away from home and his comforts.  On the other hand, no fortune teller or magician could have foretold what would happen while he was there.  The speaker can hardly believe what occurred himself.

 


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Answered by bestanswers
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              The poem was written in 1869 and published in 1914 in Thomas Hardy’s collection of poems, Satire of Circumstances, Lyrics and Reveries. Lyonnesse is a fictitious place of the Arthurian myth, and the poet’s use of a mythical environment adds a mystical flavour to the poet’s subsequent journey. 

              The poet had gone to a church near Cornwall, Lyonnesse to oversee construction work, where he fell in love with a young lady named Emma Gifford, and they eventually got married. Their meeting finally changed Hardy’s life for the better. To honour their union, the poet composed this poem and used Lyonnesse as a set of his poetry.

              The poet is in a mood of contemplation where his solitary journey has been asserted by the word “lonesomeness”. He is the solitary reaper, on a mission to explore the unexplored. The poem can also be seen as a spiritual voyage where the poet travels from the darkness of ignorance to the light of knowledge.

              Thus, the poet’s journey can be read as in search of himself. At his destination, his meets himself and the experience is overjoyed. He is a renewed man who has understood the importance of wisdom over mere knowledge. He thus transcends from a poet to become a prophet who will henceforth bequeath upon humanity the understanding of the world.


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