Wednesday, April 1, 2020
Ulysses Essays - Odyssey, Ulysses, Telemachus, Odysseus,
  Ulysses  An Idle King In "Ulysses," Tennyson presents Ulysses, the great Greek  war hero and warrior of the Trojan War, serving, again, as king of Ithaca.    Ulysses, having been home for three years, feels himself stagnating and wasting  his life in the unwanted role of king. Longs to be again the man he has been.    Ulysses desires a life of independence, physical adventure, and intellectual  pursuit. Ulysses desires a life of independence. The island is dependent on him  and the civilization "hoard, and sleep, and feed, and know not me."    Ulysses yearns to escape to be on his own yet; the people rely on his kingship  although they carry out life without giving much thought for Ulysses. He sees  the "savage race" not aware of what his heart desires nor of adventure  and/or intellectual life. After three years of being king, Ulysses feel old and  his idleness leaves him with his name and reputation. Discerns that his subjects  do not comprehend his personality, and believes that his talents are  disappearing while staying at Ithaca. Ulysses says, "How dull it is to  pause, to make an end" to a journey that has adventure, courageous events,  and glory. He does not want to stop and live life as king, but to sail himself  into independence. Telemachus, son of Ulysses, is more fitted to govern than his  father does because Telemachus strives to take over "the scepter and the  isle." Secondly, Telemachus has the deposition that will allow him  "... by slow prudence to make/A rugged people," and bring them to a  state that "is useful and ... good." Ulysses sees his son able to  amend the citizens up to a new level. In seeking independence, Ulysses chooses  to give his throne to his son so he can rejuvenate his soul, and which allows  himself to find greatness again. Ulysses desires a life of physical adventure.    He comes to realize that "For some three suns" he has "store[d],  and hoard[ed]" himself as though to "rest from travel." Remembers  living abroad for twenty years as he "[roamed] with a hungry heart"  seeking and feeling adventure. Destiny allows Ulysses to see much different  "cities of men" where they have certain "manners, climates,  councils, [and] governments," which greet him with respect and honor.    Ulysses also remembers of the times he has "enjoyed/Greatly, ... suffered  greatly, both with those that loved me and alone." The "delight of  battle.../Far on the ringing planes of windy Troy" pleases Ulysses and  calms his soul which seeks for more adventure. The king knows that breathing is  not living and wishes to fulfill life with many adventures and experiences. What  little life remains for Ulysses, he knows that "life plied on life,"  one life after another, is not enough for all of the delightful wars. In  addition, he apprehends that his sailors are old, like himself, but that  "Old age hath yet his honor and his toil." Ulysses desires a great  amount of adventure by sailing with his hair in the wind again. This, he thinks,  will save him from being "a gray spirit yearning in desire," and will  restore him to, like before, an active life. Ulysses desires a life of  intellectual pursuit. He finds satisfaction in physical adventure and in a  continuos intellectual venture to fill his avid thirst for life. Ulysses  continually seeks for knowledge, "Beyond the utmost bound of human  thought." Considers himself "...a part of all that ... [he has]  met," from the previous travels, yet he wishes "to seek a newer  world." How he will find the new destination is by "sail[ing] beyond  the sunset, and the baths of all the western stars, until [he dies]."    Ulysses will continue his quest for intellectual pursuit traveling westward  toward the unexplored land that might lie in the Atlantic Ocean and keep seeking  knowledge until death overtakes him. In his monologue, Ulysses states, "...  every hour ... saved from that eternal silence [death]," is "A bringer  of new things." Ulysses will undertake to reach the horizon, which is  always from its pursuer, seeking new knowledge. Not only his thirst for insight  will never be satisfied, but he plans, even if he has not, "that strength  which in old days/Moved earth and heaven," will be capable to strive, to  seek, to find...." The quest for wisdom makes Ulysses wants to leave his  kingdom and feel the same again as years before. Ulysses, who desires to be  independent, finds that the life he returns to be not what after twenty years he  has been searching. He feels that he needs to be adventurous,    
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