You are viewing our Forum Archives. To view or take place in current topics click here.
Can anyone help me with my hw? will rep
Posted:

Can anyone help me with my hw? will repPosted:

Glow
  • TTG Natural
Status: Offline
Joined: Jul 28, 201014Year Member
Posts: 957
Reputation Power: 48
Status: Offline
Joined: Jul 28, 201014Year Member
Posts: 957
Reputation Power: 48
Okay if anyone is willing to help me with this poem thing where I have to answer questions I will rep.


Poem: Charge Of The Light Brigade


I need to know What the characters names are and the setting



Please Whoever helps Ill rep
#2. Posted:
eddi3a
  • TTG Natural
Status: Offline
Joined: Jul 20, 201014Year Member
Posts: 981
Reputation Power: 37
Status: Offline
Joined: Jul 20, 201014Year Member
Posts: 981
Reputation Power: 37
This what i could find all info

ennyson's poem, published December 9, 1854 in The Examiner[1], praises the Brigade, "When can their glory fade? O the wild charge they made!", while mourning the appalling futility of the charge: "Not tho' the soldier knew / Some one had blunder'd ... Charging an army while / All the world wonder'd:". According to his grandson Sir Charles Tennyson, Tennyson wrote the poem in only a few minutes after reading an account of the battle in The Times. As poet laureate he often wrote verses about public events. It immediately became hugely popular, even reaching the troops in the Crimea, where it was distributed in pamphlet form at the behest of Jane, Lady Franklin.[2]
Each stanza tells a different part of the story, and there is a delicate balance between nobility and brutality throughout. Although Tennyson's subject is the nobleness of supporting one's country, and the poem's tone and hoofbeat cadences are rousing, it pulls no punches about the horror of war: "Cannon to right of them, /Cannon to left of them, / Cannon behind them / Volley'd & thunder'd". With "into the valley of Death" Tennyson works in resonance with "the valley of the shadow of Death" from Psalm 23; then and now, it is often read at funerals. Tennyson's Crimea does not offer the abstract tranquil death of the psalm but is instead predatory and menacing: "into the jaws of Death" and "into the mouth of Hell". The alliterative "Storm'd at with shot and shell" echoes the whistling of ball as the cavalry charge through it. After the fury of the charge, the final notes are gentle, reflective and laden with sorrow: "Then they rode back, but not / Not the six hundred".
#3. Posted:
Obsolete
  • Wise One
Status: Offline
Joined: May 27, 201113Year Member
Posts: 537
Reputation Power: 28
Status: Offline
Joined: May 27, 201113Year Member
Posts: 537
Reputation Power: 28
Characters:

Lord Cardigan

Mrs. Clarissa Morris

Lord Raglan

Lord Lucan

Mrs. Fanny Duberly

Capt. Louis Edward Nolan

Capt. Fitz Maxse

Trooper Metcalfe

Paymaster Capt. Henry Duberly

Gen. Scarlett

Capt. William Morris

Trooper Mitchell

Lady Scarlett

Lt. Col. Douglas


Setting: A chronicle of events that led to the British involvement in the Crimean War against Russia and which led to the siege of Sevastopol and the fierce Battle of Balaclava on October 25, 1854


Last edited by Obsolete ; edited 1 time in total
#4. Posted:
-Censor
  • Wise One
Status: Offline
Joined: Mar 13, 201113Year Member
Posts: 556
Reputation Power: 22
Status: Offline
Joined: Mar 13, 201113Year Member
Posts: 556
Reputation Power: 22
Summary - The poem tells the story of a brigade consisting of 600 soldiers who rode on horseback into the valley of death for half a league (about one and a half miles). They were obeying a command to charge the enemy forces that had been seizing their guns.

Setting - Valley of Death

Characters - I'm not sure if you want the characters in the movie or in the poem.
#5. Posted:
AgentMurhawk013
  • New Member
Status: Offline
Joined: Oct 03, 201014Year Member
Posts: 33
Reputation Power: 1
Status: Offline
Joined: Oct 03, 201014Year Member
Posts: 33
Reputation Power: 1
Battle of Balaclava during the Crimean War
#6. Posted:
WSFMigo
  • Prospect
Status: Offline
Joined: Apr 30, 201014Year Member
Posts: 634
Reputation Power: 23
Status: Offline
Joined: Apr 30, 201014Year Member
Posts: 634
Reputation Power: 23
I think i did that for my English GCSE's but i cant remember off the top of my head what i wrote.

You could do how the author portrayed the soldiers and then say how it was seen now compared to back then.
So back then they were seen as heroes for that charge. However we know now they ran the wrong way and that lead to there death.
#7. Posted:
MLP
  • TTG Contender
Status: Offline
Joined: Oct 26, 201014Year Member
Posts: 3,869
Reputation Power: 177
Status: Offline
Joined: Oct 26, 201014Year Member
Posts: 3,869
Reputation Power: 177
why not read the poem?

might be a good place to start. then go to wikipedia
Jump to:
You are viewing our Forum Archives. To view or take place in current topics click here.