This volume offers one of the most comprehensive surveys of Tennyson's poetry available for the serious student. It includes selections from the 1830, 1832, and 1842 volumes, together with songs from The Princess and In Memoriam ; complete poems from the middle period, including Maud, Enoch Arden , and nine Idylls of the King , including the Dedication ; and a generous offering from the late period, 1872-92. The authoritative texts are based on the Cambridge Tennyson; additional selections have been taken from Sir Charles Tennyson's editions of Tennyson's Unpublished Early Poems (1931) and The Devil and the Lady (1930), as well as the Eversley edition, with notes by the poet's son. The texts of the poems are copiously annotated and the lines of poetry conveniently numbered for easy reference. A special section, Juvenilia and Early Responses, offers easy access to work by the young Tennyson, not readily available elsewhere, together with responses from his contemporaries.Criticism includes significant statements on Tennyson as well as interpretations of the major poems. A special feature is Georg Roppen's essay on Tennyson and the theory of evolution. Other critical voices are those of A. C. Bradley, Harold Nicolson, Douglas Bush, Arthur J. Carr, T. S. Eliot, Paull F. Baum, John Killham, F. E. L. Priestley, Francis Golffing, and Robert W. Hill, Jr.A Chronology, Selected Bibliography, and Index are also included.
Works, including In Memoriam in 1850 and "The Charge of the Light Brigade" in 1854, of Alfred Tennyson, first baron, known as lord, appointed British poet laureate in 1850, reflect Victorian sentiments and aesthetics.
Elizabeth Tennyson, wife, bore Alfred Tennyson, the fourth of twelve children, to George Tennyson, clergyman; he inevitably wrote his books. In 1816, parents sent Tennyson was sent to grammar school of Louth.
Alfred Tennyson disliked school so intensely that from 1820, home educated him. At the age of 18 years in 1827, Alfred joined his two brothers at Trinity College, Cambridge and with Charles Tennyson, his brother, published Poems by Two Brothers, his book, in the same year.
Alfred Tennyson continued throughout his life and in the 1870s also to write a number of plays.
In 1884, the queen raised Alfred Tennyson, a great favorite of Albert, prince, thereafter to the peerage of Aldworth. She granted such a high rank for solely literary distinction to this only Englishman.
Alfred Tennyson died at the age of 83 years, and people buried his body in abbey of Westminster.
Tennyson,most representative poet of victorian age expresses the middle class through his poetry. Along with discipline & form, a sense of romantic values & lyricism are the special features of tennyson's poetry. Its beautiful!!!!
What Tennyson lacks in concise language he makes up for in the beauty of these lyrical verses. The subject matters that this author chooses are all things that if I were to write poetry I would also choose. Gallantry and Chivarly of Knights and Princesses. King Arthur and his court. References to Greek Mythology and a constant fascination with death.
School text that I rather enjoyed.. We cannot be kind to each other here for even an hour. We whisper, and hint, and chuckle and grin at our brother's shame; however you take it we men are a little breed. - Alfred Lord Tennyson
Alfred Tennyson is, after Shakespeare and Chaucer, one of the most skilled craftsmen in the English language. He has a way of spinning beautifully memorable lines, such as these from Tithonus:
“Far-folded mists, and gleaming halls of morn.”
And …
“.... Arise And shake the darkness from their loosened manes, And beat the twilight into flakes of fire.”
As an avid reader of narrative and dramatic poetry, it’s no surprise that Tennyson is one of my favorite authors. He’s written many memorable poems such as Ulysses, Tithonus, The Holy Grail, St. Simeon Stylites, The Lotos Eaters and Morte d’Arthur. (Parts of In Memoriam are also outstanding.) On the reputation of these works alone, he stands among the greatest English poets.
The Norton Critical Edition is an excellent collection of Tennyson’s poems, with helpful footnotes throughout. It does a good job of selecting his best works, and culling the dross. I recommend the poems mentioned above. His epic, Idylls of the King, is an interesting failure.
Love or hate poetry, I recommend Tennyson. This book is an excellent starting point.
all in all it was beautifully written, and i was moved many times, especially when reading in memoriam and the mono drama about maud, i love the way tennyson talks about love, mortality, grief, nature, and nostalgia. but i’ve been bored at times too, hence only 4 stars instead of 5, my dude rambled so much about queens and kings (especially arthur pendragon lmao)
I know people might want to throw rocks at me for asking, but am I alone in thinking Tennyson's poetry is mostly just an exercise in belletrism with little else to offer?
I'm fond of most other major Victorian poets (especially Browning and Rosetti), but Tennyson's work is a real thorn in my side. It's kind of like when I wash my white laundry. All the bright shiny stuff is made of up other Victorian poets. But Tennyson is the gross, almost-brown towel that I cleaned up puke and cat pee with.
It is hard for a soldier to not love The Charge of the Light Brigade. I love The Eagle, simple and elegant. The Kracken is great as well. I tend to fall with the critics who aren't fans of the Idylls of the King, but some portions are compelling.
Easily my favorite Victorian poet. Christina Rossetti follows somewhere behind. This volume includes "Idylls of the King," "In Memoriam," "The Lady of Shallot," most others.
Tennyson is best known for the Charge of the Light Brigade and remembered for little else. But there is wealth of beauty to be found in these poems and plays. Ulysses, of course, is sublimely beautiful, but the great, great work which repays countless re-reading is In Memoriam, his lament for his dead friend, and his expression of undying grief. One of the great poetic works of English literature. In addition, I should recommend that anyone interested in finding out more should listen to Melvyn Bragg's In Our Time programme on this poem. It is one of the best, since the poem obviously got to Bragg in a major way, a reflection no doubt of his continuing sorrow for the suicide of his own wife mnay years ago.
One other gem to discover (but not in this edition) is Beckett in the collected plays. Would that someone would put on a double bill with this and T.S.Eliott's Murder in the Cathedral.
As with all Norton editions this includes an excellent introduction and many essays.
Fiiiiiiiinally done with this one, almost a whole year (though broken up by several check out-renew-renew-return cycles at the library). Tennyson is spotty for me. At the word by word level, his poetry is often beautiful and fun to read–he is good at writing stuff that sounds good. However, probably over half of the poems didn't really work with me, the big exception being "In Memoriam," which is an incredible achievement.
Also gonna count this as the 6th fat classic of 2023, it definitely took the longest to read.
How anyone can read "In Memoriam" to his friend Hallam, and think this man was not queer I have no idea. Such deep, beautiful love. Such gripping, torturous grief. I have friends, and then I have the love of my life, and this is the eulogy I would write for my romantic partner.
I love most of Tennyson's work, and appreciate the variety of styles and cadences he moves between. I get lost in some of his more referential works, but it's clear why he's one of the greats.
When I first read Tennyson's work more than thirty years ago, I admit I was not impressed; reading him now, his work definitely speaks more to me than it did then, and while I still would not characterize him as a favorite, I did enjoy reading the selections in this book. I would very much recommend!
His poems endure speaking clearly to this modern one. His mastery of a great variety of poetic forms and moods enabled him to communicate such extremes of feeling as calm despair and wild rest, rapturous love, the soul of the rose went into my blood and noble resolve.
Favourite poems: -The eagle -Cradle song -Charge of the light brigade -Break break break -Beauty -Tears idle tears -Crossing the bar -Fatima -In the valley of cauteretz -Lullaby -O beauty passing beauty -The death of the old year -The owl
My first blind date with a book, and it wasn’t horrible. I have some issues understanding coloquial writing, nevertheless you can find in Tennyson’s verses what I’d call reverence, introversion and a further analysis of reality than what revolutionary idealism was prepared to face.
“In Memoriam” is a painful, stinking, raw companionship to a man’s journey with love, god, and self. A truly cathartic read, the wave of A.H.H washed over me and left me shipwrecked in a state of excited content for all of the beauty and feeling this world has to offer us
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.