The first stanzas describe the view from “the field the road runs by to many-towered Camelot” (line, 5-6). Camelot is shown as a wondrous land, where the king, knights, and civilians live together in peace and justice. To the lady, it seems almost unreal and most definitely unreachable. Tennyson also describes the “magic web” that the lady weaves “night and day” (line, 37-39). The lady weaves the sights that she sees through the mirror with bright colors to contrast the grayness of her tower. The mirror shows the happiness outside of the walls of her tower. As the lady descends down to Camelot, the “broad stream” begins to feel the lady’s fate and emphasizes the seriousness of the
The first stanzas describe the view from “the field the road runs by to many-towered Camelot” (line, 5-6). Camelot is shown as a wondrous land, where the king, knights, and civilians live together in peace and justice. To the lady, it seems almost unreal and most definitely unreachable. Tennyson also describes the “magic web” that the lady weaves “night and day” (line, 37-39). The lady weaves the sights that she sees through the mirror with bright colors to contrast the grayness of her tower. The mirror shows the happiness outside of the walls of her tower. As the lady descends down to Camelot, the “broad stream” begins to feel the lady’s fate and emphasizes the seriousness of the