The Eagle Apr 2026

: Tennyson uses words like "hands" (personification) and compares the eagle’s dive to a "thunderbolt," evoking the power of Zeus.

The eagle has held a "kingly" status across cultures for centuries. The Parable of the Eagle - Roger K. Allen The Eagle

: The eagle reigns in a space untouched by humans, looking down upon the world. II. Cultural & Spiritual Symbolism : Tennyson uses words like "hands" (personification) and

: The poem is a short fragment consisting of two three-line stanzas (tercets). The rhyme scheme is AAA and BBB ( hands, lands, stands and crawls, walls, falls ), creating a sense of rigid permanence followed by sudden motion. Key Themes : Allen : The eagle reigns in a space

: Perched on "mountain walls," the eagle exists in a "lonely" realm high above the "wrinkled sea".

Lord Alfred Tennyson’s 1851 poem is a masterclass in imagery and personification, depicting an eagle's solitary majesty.