Lord Alfred Tennyson's The Lady of Shalott: Symbolism and Pictorial Quality
Lord Alfred Tennyson's The Lady of Shalott: Symbolism and Pictorial Quality
Lord Alfred Tennyson's The Lady of Shalott: Symbolism and Pictorial Quality
The Lady of Shallot is not an allegory though as in Marina the images sometimes
have the power of symbols says Steane . The mirror, for instance, suggests much beyond
its role as an item in a fairy story. For as the Lady weaves the mirror's magic sights in
her tapestry she is herself partly taking the role of the artist , and her existence in the
island castle has something in common with the artist's apartness . Moreover, as she
sees reality only through her mirror so the artist may tend to experience vicariously
drawing his knowledge not from direct contact but from other words of art. He has his
own special nature, like the lady; partly an affection to him this sense of difference,
partly a blessing and possibly the very condition of his being an artist at all .For life in
the ordinary day to day life he may be all unfit, as was the Lady, and, for him as for her,
only disaster may follow the attempt to break the bounds. This is not ' the message ' of
The Lady of Shallot but it is , definitely , a part of the ground out of which the poem grew
.