Exeter Essays

  • The Exeter Book

    823 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Exeter Book The Exeter Book is the largest existing collection of Old English poetry. The manuscript was given to the library of Exeter Cathedral by its first bishop, Leofric, at the end of the tenth century. The book consists of 131 parchment leaves which measure approximately 12.5 by 8.6 inches. The most famous works contained in the Exeter Book include “The Wanderer,” “The Wife’s Lament,” “The Seafarer,” and “Wulf and Eadwacer.” In addition to the 31 major poems, 96 riddles are also included

  • Lawrence's Causing Problems In The Exeter Family

    517 Words  | 2 Pages

    American population. However, the Exeter family has lots of it. In 1903, Lawrence Exeter’s wife gives birth to a baby boy, whom they name after his father. Given the wealth of the Exeter family, they pay to send their son to a private elementary school by the time he is six years old. At the age of seven, Lawrence Jr is given a bicycle, just like any other young boy. However, by the time Lawrence Jr has turned twelve, he is a troublemaker, and is causing problems in the Exeter household. Finally, his parents

  • Lawrence Exeter Jr.: A Short Story

    977 Words  | 2 Pages

    pages of check copies. The detective puts on a bewildered face and wonders what he is supposed to accomplish with the unsolvable papers. Little does the detective know he has a long road ahead of him on discovering the unsolved mystery of Lawrence Exeter Jr. According to the first four checks he has a new addition to his well off family, and that Lawrence senior is a wealthy man working in the government. Lawrence bringing in millions of dollars a year gave him great reputation. He had

  • Similarities Between The Seafarer And The Wife's Lament

    1001 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Exeter Book is a collection of Anglo-Saxon manuscripts that expresses societal values of the past time. Exile: the state of being barred from one’s native country, usually for political or punitive reasons. Exile was important throughout the poems; one’s lord usually defined his or her identity. Many of the poems in the Exeter Book allude to the condensation of human life, cautioning readers that no one can ever by pass his or her destiny. “The seafarer”, “The wanderer” and “The Wife’s lament”

  • What Are Gender Roles In John Irving's Novel

    1585 Words  | 4 Pages

    John Irving was born March 2, 1942, in Exeter, New Hampshire, he was raised by his biological mother, and stepfather. Many events from Irving’s personal life have inspired books that he has written, such as, parent separations, feminism, sexual abuse, and sexual fantasies. Not only have plots been inspired by Irving’s personal life, but also the characters; which often follow Irving’s past experiences. Much like Charles Dickens, Irving’s themes focus on the darkness of the world and what the characters

  • A Crossing of Old and New: Riddle 55 of the Exeter Book

    1860 Words  | 4 Pages

    A Crossing of Old and New: Riddle 55 of the Exeter Book I saw in the hall, where heroes drank, carried onto the floor a wondrous woodtree of four kinds and wound gold, cunningly fastened treasure, and part of silver 5 and the sign of the cross, which He raised the ladder for us to heaven before He stormed the city of the inhabitants of hell. I can easily tell before noblemen the origin of this tree: there was maple and oak and the hard yew 10 and the dark holly:

  • Seafarer Heroic Qualities

    505 Words  | 2 Pages

    However, other various Anglo-Saxon poems like The Wife's Lament or The Seafarer demonstrates heroic qualities in a unique fashion that differ from the traditional epic hero. For example in The Seafarer, the narrator is the hero of the poem. The narrator throughout the poem explains the different tribulations and hardships that he endures throughout his voyages on the open sea. He explains theses hardships stating, “Around my heart. Hunger tore/ At my weary soul. No man sheltered/ On the quiet fairness

  • The Seafarer Comparison

    877 Words  | 2 Pages

    A different example in this time period is The Seafarer. While The Seafarer is about a man who goes off to sea, it also explains how someone can work for something but at the end it returns to the beginning just like many empires. The beginning of the poem explains that this sailor goes through trials that many don't have to face by stating, "Who could believe, knowing but / The passion of cities, swelled proud with wine / And no taste of misfortune, how often, how wearily, / I put myself back on

  • Masculinity In Beowulf And The Wanderer

    1507 Words  | 4 Pages

    Merriam-Webster defines exile as the state or a period of forced or voluntary absence from one’s country or home. Both the Wife in “The Wife’s Lament” and the narrator of “The Wanderer” have their own form of exile that results in inner conflict. The Wife suffers from the estrangement from her husband, and she constantly mourns for happier times. The Wife despises the fact that women must be serious, strong, and well-held together for their family and husband and never show a frowning face. Both

  • The Wife's Lament

    1530 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Wife's Lament Over the years, there have been many interpretations of who the speaker of The Wife’s Lament could be. These range from very interesting ideas to ones that seem a little rough around the edges. It is obvious that no sure answer can be found due to the fact that whoever wrote this poem is dead and that the answer will always be in speculation even if it is correct. Hopefully, at the end of this quest I will be slightly more enlightened as to who the true speaker may really be

  • The Wanderer Seafarer’s Lament

    574 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Wanderer Seafarer’s Lament (An analysis of “Seafarer”, “Wanderer”, and “Lament”) What decision in life can we make on our that, wont affect the life of others, or harm them. How come when we try to protect our most loved ones, there the ones getting hurt the most for our actions that we tend no to acknowledge. Well back before Christ was born there lived a group of people called the Anglo Saxons who where mighty warriors that always set out to sea on voyages or adventures. Many of them died

  • Contrasting Outlooks in Dream of the Rood and The Wanderer

    1260 Words  | 3 Pages

    Differing Outlooks in Dream of the Rood and The Wanderer Outlook defines our perception of reality. The characters in Dream of the Rood and The Wanderer maintain opposed perspectives that greatly influence the way they view their common state of desolation. The dreamer and the Cross in Dream of the Rood embrace a religious ideology that gives them hope, whereas the earth-walker in The Wanderer embraces an existential view that leaves him to suffer his loneliness. The characters' differing outlooks

  • Examples of Authors Who Wrote Elegies

    615 Words  | 2 Pages

    "Fixed Line spacing" An elegy is a poem that reflects upon death. It is a very good way for people to release stress. It makes others think. An elegy to some people, is very depressing to read. Most of thge time it tells the truth about a side of a persons life, that no one knows about. An elegy could be a real breath taker, if taken the right way. There are many well known elegy authors. One of them is Thomas Gray. Gray wrote the elegy “Written in a Country Churchyard.';In Gray’s

  • Sonnet On Being Cautioned Against Walking On An Headland Overlooking The Sea

    1872 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the poems, “Sonnet: On Being Cautioned Against Walking on an Headland Overlooking the Sea, Because It Was Frequented by a Lunatic”, “Huge Vapours Brood above the Clifted Shore”, and, “Beachy Head”, by Charlotte Smith, she explores the relationship between society and those who chose to separate themselves from society. Through use of multiplex symbolism, likening society to water and headlands to outsiders, she is able to recount and enumerate the complex aspects of their relationship, concluding

  • Sophie Schoholl Hero Journey

    902 Words  | 2 Pages

    The film Sophie Scholl reflects the repetition of the concept of the “hero from across the sea”. One of Northrop Frye's lessons on the biblical stories, he explores in detail what “the hero from across the sea” means. This theory consists of a wasteland that is ruled by the impotent old king, whose land is being destroyed by a sea monster whose only goal is to demand human sacrifice. In this story, the king's daughter “the princess tied to a rock” is chosen as a sacrifice to the sea monster, but

  • An Analysis Of The Poem Dally From Outsiders By S. E. Hinton

    602 Words  | 2 Pages

    This Poem ¨Island¨ by JD Brown these poem best relates to the character Dally From Outsiders by S.E Hinton. The poem ïsland¨ is about having the fear of being an island because they are alone, their outskirts are cold and beaten by the shore, and lava eats away the greenness. In the Outsiders Dally is alone, feels that no one knows him, and people take the good out of him. JD Brown and Dally are both afraid of becoming completely alone. In the poem the character has a fear of becoming an island

  • Offshore Rebellion

    895 Words  | 2 Pages

    In sharp contrast, Penelope Fitzgerald’s novel Offshore, explores the idea of rebellion by questioning whether an individual can find happiness when removed from orthodox social construct. Essentially rebelling against societal norms and expectations through the active choice of living outside of conventional standards, the central character, Nenna, elects to live on a houseboat with her children, with minimal connection to land and more refined society. Her future is as uneasy as the waters she

  • Pray For The Winds To Come Meaning

    529 Words  | 2 Pages

    The first example of longing comes from the lyrics of “Pray for the Winds to Come”. The lyrics represent longing caused by a separation from home. The lyrics are written from a first person perspective of the narrator. The lyrics reveal the narrator’s acute longing to home in the North. The melancholic state of the narrator becomes vivid with his experienced feelings of alienation and nostalgia. Although he feels trapped in a foreign place where he does not belong, he still seems to have a hint of

  • Exploring Isolation: A Study of Literature and Lifestyle

    586 Words  | 2 Pages

    Many people often assume that isolation is an idea of the past, but it is still alive and well today. As described in the Anglo-Saxon poem, “The Seafarer,” he was an isolationist, and much like in “The Glass Castle Memoir,” by Jeannette Walls and also in “Man homeless by choice has ‘a great life,” by Edythe Jensen, both of these modern day authors describe their main characters with qualities of an isolationists. While it may not appeal to many, there are a few people that choose to step away from

  • Personal Experiences Reflected in John Knowle´s A Separate Peace

    1282 Words  | 3 Pages

    experiences and current events. He took these experiences and transferred them to his novel. Today many people appreciate his novel and its influences. John Knowles’ boarding school at Exeter, his life and experiences during World War II, and the characters’ guilt influenced his great work, A Separate Peace. Phillips Exeter Academy, the school John Knowles attended, played a major role in the development of the story. John Knowles wrote A Separate Peace fifteen years after his graduation. In the beginning