Preface
Introduction
Contents
To The Queen
Claribel: A Melody
Lilian
Isabel
Mariana
TO - - - -
Madeline
Song. - - The Owl
Second Song
Recollections Of The Arabian Nights
Ode To Memory
Song
Adeline
A Character
The Poet
The Poet's Mind
The Sea - Fairies
The Deserted House
The Dying Swan
A Dirge
Love And Death
The Ballad Of Oriana
Circumstance
The Merman
The Mermaid
Sonnet To J.M.K.
The Lady Of Shalott
Mariana In The South
Eleanore
The Miller's Daughter
Fatima
'None
The Sisters
TO - - - - -
The Palace Of Art
Lady Clara Vere De Vere
The May Queen
New - Year's Eve
Conclusion
The Lotos - Eaters
Choric Song
A Dream Of Fair Women
Margaret
The Blackbird
The Death Of The Old Year
To J.S.
"You Ask Me Why, Tho' Ill At Ease..."
"Of Old Sat Freedom On The Heights..."
"Love Thou Thy Land, With Love Far-Brought..."
The Goose
The Epic
Morte D'Arthur
The Gardener's Daughter; or, The Pictures
Dora
Audley Court
Walking To The Mail
The Early Poems Of Edwin Morris; or, The Lake
St. Simeon Stylites
The Talking Oak
Love And Duty
The Golden Year
Ulysses
Locksley Hall
Godiva
The Two Voices
The Day-Dream
The Sleeping Palace
The Sleeping Beauty
The Arrival
The Revival
The Departure
Moral
L ' Envoi
Epilogue
Amphion
St. Agnes
Sir Galahad
Edward Gray
Will Waterproof's Lyrical Monologue
TO - - - - After Reading A Life And Letters
To E.L.
Lady Clare
The Lord Of Burleigh
Sir Launcelot And Queen Guinevere
A Farewell
The Beggar Maid
The Vision Of Sin
Cone Not, When I Am Dead...
The Eagle
Move Eastward, Happy Earth...
Break, Break, Break...
The Poet's Song
Appendix
Sources
First printed in 1830.
The only authoritative light thrown on the person here described is what the present Lord Tennyson gives, who tells us that "the then well-known Cambridge orator S--was partly described". He was "a very plausible, parliament-like, self-satisfied speaker at the Union Debating Society ". The character reminds us of Wordsworth's Moralist. See 'Poet's Epitaph';--
One to whose smooth-rubbed soul can cling,
Nor form nor feeling, great nor small;
A reasoning, self-sufficient thing,
An intellectual all in all.
Shakespeare's fop, too (Hotspur's speech, 'Henry IV.', i., i., 2), seems to have suggested a touch or two.
With a half-glance upon the sky
At night he said, "The wanderings
Of this most intricate Universe
Teach me the nothingness of things".
Yet could not all creation pierce
Beyond the bottom of his eye.
He spake of beauty: that the dull
Saw no divinity in grass,
Life in dead stones, or spirit in air;
Then looking as 'twere in a glass,
He smooth'd his chin and sleek'd his hair,
And said the earth was beautiful.
He spake of virtue: not the gods
More purely, when they wish to charm
Pallas and Juno sitting by:
And with a sweeping of the arm,
And a lack-lustre dead-blue eye,
Devolved his rounded periods.
Most delicately hour by hour
He canvass'd human mysteries,
And trod on silk, as if the winds
Blew his own praises in his eyes,
And stood aloof from other minds
In impotence of fancied power.
With lips depress'd as he were meek,
Himself unto himself he sold:
Upon himself himself did feed:
Quiet, dispassionate, and cold,
And other than his form of creed,
With chisell'd features clear and sleek.
Preface
Introduction
Contents
To The Queen
Claribel: A Melody
Lilian
Isabel
Mariana
TO - - - -
Madeline
Song. - - The Owl
Second Song
Recollections Of The Arabian Nights
Ode To Memory
Song
Adeline
A Character
The Poet
The Poet's Mind
The Sea - Fairies
The Deserted House
The Dying Swan
A Dirge
Love And Death
The Ballad Of Oriana
Circumstance
The Merman
The Mermaid
Sonnet To J.M.K.
The Lady Of Shalott
Mariana In The South
Eleanore
The Miller's Daughter
Fatima
'None
The Sisters
TO - - - - -
The Palace Of Art
Lady Clara Vere De Vere
The May Queen
New - Year's Eve
Conclusion
The Lotos - Eaters
Choric Song
A Dream Of Fair Women
Margaret
The Blackbird
The Death Of The Old Year
To J.S.
"You Ask Me Why, Tho' Ill At Ease..."
"Of Old Sat Freedom On The Heights..."
"Love Thou Thy Land, With Love Far-Brought..."
The Goose
The Epic
Morte D'Arthur
The Gardener's Daughter; or, The Pictures
Dora
Audley Court
Walking To The Mail
The Early Poems Of Edwin Morris; or, The Lake
St. Simeon Stylites
The Talking Oak
Love And Duty
The Golden Year
Ulysses
Locksley Hall
Godiva
The Two Voices
The Day-Dream
The Sleeping Palace
The Sleeping Beauty
The Arrival
The Revival
The Departure
Moral
L ' Envoi
Epilogue
Amphion
St. Agnes
Sir Galahad
Edward Gray
Will Waterproof's Lyrical Monologue
TO - - - - After Reading A Life And Letters
To E.L.
Lady Clare
The Lord Of Burleigh
Sir Launcelot And Queen Guinevere
A Farewell
The Beggar Maid
The Vision Of Sin
Cone Not, When I Am Dead...
The Eagle
Move Eastward, Happy Earth...
Break, Break, Break...
The Poet's Song
Appendix
Sources
Related Content for Tennyson's Poems