In The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, Sandy Stranger imagines a character from this poem telling her she is to be “so ill-fated in love” as Miss Jean Brodie recites this poem. That character in this poem is compared to a “bold seër in a trance” as she chants “a carol, mournful, holy.” In this poem’s last stanza, a man sees the title character and muses “She has a lovely face.” This poem begins in a place where “On either side the river lie / Long fields of barley and of rye.” The title character of this poem says “I am half sick of shadows” after weaving images of a nearby castle. In this poem, a mirror is “crack’d from side to side” after the title character triggers a curse by looking out at Lancelot. For 10 points, name this Alfred, Lord Tennyson poem about a woman who dies on a boat headed to Camelot. ■END■
ANSWER: “The Lady of Shalott”
<JK, British Literature>
= Average correct buzz position