Ulysses – Alfred Lord Tennyson


Short Summary

Alfred Lord Tennyson’s Ulysses (1842) is one of the most celebrated poems in the English
literary canon. Written in the voice of the aging Greek hero Ulysses — the Roman name for
Homer’s Odysseus — the poem is a powerful dramatic monologue that captures the tension
between rest and restlessness, between mortality and the unquenchable human desire to keep
striving. Tennyson wrote it shortly after the death of his close friend Arthur Henry Hallam in
1833, and the poem pulses with grief transformed into defiance.

At its heart, Ulysses is a meditation on what it means to be alive in the face of old age and death.
The aged king, now home in Ithaca after years of legendary adventure, finds domestic life
unbearable. He longs to sail again, to seek, to strive — and he refuses to let the dimming of his
physical powers silence the fire within.

AT A GLANCE

Poet Alfred Lord Tennyson
Written 1833 (published 1842)
Form Dramatic Monologue
Speaker Ulysses (Odysseus)
Meter Blank Verse (Unrhymed Iambic Pentameter)
Lines 70
Inspired by Homer’s Odyssey & Dante’s Inferno
Theme Ambition, old age, courage, restlessness