Comparing The Seafarer, The Wanderer, and The Wife's Lament Essay

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    Exile is commonly seen in Anglo-Saxon literature, specifically the poems: The Wanderer, The Wife’s Lament, and The Seafarer. All three poems deal with the idea of losing something and missing the something so much it pains them to think about it. Although in many cases, the person experiencing exile has nothing to do but think about their exile. In The Wanderer, the speaker has lost all of his kinsman over time. He feels exiled by his “misery, grievous disasters, and death of kin” and he is “weary

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    Some people try to lie and hide things from their family, run away, or even attempt to commit suicide. Recently I read three poems titled, “ Seafarer, Wanderer, and Wife's Lament.” These three poems are about sadness and hard times and I believe they have three messages. First of all, The Seafarer is a great poem and has a very good message in it. The seafarer is about a man who is lost at sea and is contemplating all of his decisions up to this moment of him alone at sea. In this poem he talks about

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    The Seafarer, The Wanderer, and The Wife’s Lament all contains faith verses fate. The three poems are very similar and very different. The three poems ranging from a lonely man, to a lost soldier, to a wife’s bedrail. The medieval poems show hurt, confusion, and loneliness. The Seafarer, The Wanderer, and The Wife’s Lament all contain keening in the personalized poems, in many lines. The Wanderer is a poem based on a soldier who went into exile because of the death of his dear lord. In line twenty

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    affect a man in any state such as, physically, mentally and also emotionally. For “the Seafarer,” “The Wanderer,” and the wife writing in “The wife’s lament,” describe how being exiled shaped their way of living and thinking. Being in hard circumstances made all three poems and writers realize that getting out their “Comfort zone” was necessary to survive. “The Seafarer,” “The Wanderer,” and The “Wife’s Lament” explain how the theme of exile puts an emotional struggle, sorrow and the lack of companionship

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    In the Anglo-Saxon epic poems “The Wife’s Lament”, “The Wanderer”, and “The Seafarer”, the authors make their poetry much more interesting and enjoyable by inserting literary devices that add meaning and cohesiveness to each line. Each poem contains multiple literary devices such as kennings, caesuras, and imagery. These tools work together in order to add mood and transparency to the poetry. “The Wife’s Lament” is a poem that was translated by Ann Standford, and it uses numerous literary devices

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    In the Anglo-Saxon epic poems “The Wife’s Lament,” “The Wanderer,” and “The Seafarer,” the authors make their poetry much more interesting and enjoyable by inserting literary devices that add meaning and cohesiveness to each line. Each poem contains multiple literary devices such as kennings, caesuras, and imagery. These tools work together in order to add mood and transparency to the poetry. “The Wife’s Lament,” translated by Ann Standford, uses numerous literary devices to convey the pain and emotion

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    pain in these elegies in Exeter Book. The separation and banishment arouse great sadness and grief among the people who have in the exile. In all these three elegies, the Seafarer, the Wanderer, and the Wife’s Lament create pain and sorrow through main character to express beauty from these painful experiences. In the Seafarer, a hopeless man is suffering the pain during his duty as a sealer. Burton Raffel presents the extremely loneliness and sadness to be a sealer “my feet were cast in icy bands

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    The Seafarer Poem Summary

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    make that all very practical. The creators of each poem discuss the personal endeavors of each exile and how they each come to their own acceptance, or not. “The seafarer”, “Wanderer”, and the “Wife’s Lament” use various literary devices to express the emotional toil, sorrow, and each theme of their exile. First of all, in “The Seafarer” the writer discusses the internal conflicts he is having among the waves of the sea. Even though this self-chosen exile causes this man pain and sorrow, peace is

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