Mrs. Charotte and Industry Difficulty Sir Alfred Tenisson was one of the most famous poets in the middle of the Victorian Middle Age, and he expressed "anxiety and desire of his era naively in his era" (Longman p.1909) . Victorian living trademarks include doubts, Bible, past, and self. Advances in society prove the superiority of human beings and do everything for themselves.
Lady Short and Lenses Lady Alfred, Sir Denison wrote "Mr. Shalot" around 1830 in the so-called Victorian era. In 1929, Virginia Woolf published "The Girl in the Mirror: Reflection" in the era of so - called modernism. These artworks include women who are important to the mirror. The highlights of these stories have different influences and meanings for each of these women. In these two stories, the importance and meaning of light are in contrast, representing the change in attitude towards the writer's light description.
In addition to being the subject of painting by Edward Hughes, Mrs. Shalot is also a famous poem written by Sir Alfred, Tennyson. Mrs. Shalot may be talking about the fairy; among them, one person "whispers" is a fairy / Mrs. Shalot. In the poetry of life. This is an example of a realistic picture applied to the theme of fantasy. The name of the picture is "Midsummer night's journey" thought to be a magical era, the human world and fairy world are closest (the other is Halloween). In this photograph, there are many features of the frontier of Raphael such as the soft light around the subject and the medieval expression of young women. The style before Raphaelite is also known for its attention to detail and "idealization". In other words, the theme is expressed as "Beautiful than reality".
Sir Alfred's "Mr. Shalot" is a poem about the story of a cursed woman arrested in the tower of Charlotte Island near Camelot. Through her curse, she could not see the real world from the window. As a result, she was forced to live this life: she woven the tapestry all day, and she could not see the world but the reflection of the mirror. The story seems to focus on unrealizable love, but when you look at Charlotte's role, more Victorian understanding is revealed.