Alfred Tennyson
ward FitzGerald. The volume is rich in the best examples of Tennyson's later work. Tiresias, the monologue of the aged seer, blinded by excess of light when he beheld Athene unveiled, and under th
earlier date than the
the crowd
war, whose issu
words among
ruit to lions;
reak, when I
each, and bring
tes, was mine t
our cities an
n'd upon his
that the ty
to the tyr
that the ty
d to the ty
ork'd no good to
th the author, and his blank vers
for
I were gather
ith the famou
t their ocea
he Gods-the wi
by the popul
h worship-and the
, and watch th
al again, an
ion, and the
rowess more tha
ory, while t
unding in
, and every
with the grate
mix all odo
ght in one far
ce on FitzGerald's death, and
hen I fr
ith him into
f earth's
s peaceful
. Like the poet himself, the Sage finds a gleam of light and hope in his own subjective experiences of some unspeakable co
son! for more
ne, revolvi
t is the sym
mit of the Se
o the Namele
n. I touch'd my
mine-and yet no
rness, and thr
large life as m
park-unshadow
shadows of a
et's h
ving i
is the symbo
ism. Thus he emancipates his mind from the influence of the senses, and is enabled to attain an imperfect contact with the spiritual world." Ibn Khaldoun regards the "contact" as extremely "imperfect." He describes similar efforts made by concentrating the gaze on a mirror, a bowl of water, or the like. Tennyson was doubtless unaware that he had stumbled accidental
d the Locksley Hall Sixty Years After. The old fire of the versification is unabated, but the hero has relapsed on the gloom of the hero of Maud. He represents himself, o
sex fading
ray glimps
e request of the Mantuans, by the most
the statel
d by the li
han in this unmatched panegyric, th
anch amid
ms that pass t
ennyson's lifelong abhorrence of the critics and biographers, whose joy is in the futile and the unimportant, in personal gossip and the sweepings of the studio, the salvage of the wastepaper b
alone among poets, believed. "You know," said Tennyson to Mr Leaf; "I never liked that theory of yours about the many poets." It would be at least as easy to prove that there were many authors of Ivanhoe, or perhaps it would be a good deal more easy. However, he admitted that three lines which occur both in the Eighth and the Sixteenth Books of the Iliad are more appropriate in the later book. Similar examples might be found in his own poems. He still wrote, in the intervals of a mala
ears on earth we may think
latest e
d into hue
ferin, appeared in the December of the year. The dedication was the lament for the dead son and the salutation to the Viceroy of India, a piece of resigned and manly regret. The Demeter and Per
imate-changing
ss the darknes
hreshold of he
answer to the goddess concerning "fate beyond the Fates," and the breaking of the bonds of Hades. The ballad of Owd Ro? is one of the most spirited of the essays in dialect to which Tennyson had of late years inclined. Vastness merely expresses, in terms of poetry, Tennyson's conviction that, without immortality, life is a series of worthless contrasts.
an, the Ghost t
olly free its
to each othe
earth has ever
and the Voic
oss the Voice
en, nor sudden
ill of One who
owledge is b
lution, sw
pheres-an ever
lessenin
egend told by Mr Lowell about a house near where
low throbbing
ling weights t
bells that ran
rn'd when none
rs that open'd
the passion of the tale. The lines to Mary Boyle are all of the normal world, and worthy of a poet
r had
not w
g who l
annot
at
ut in
The G
n his eighty-first year, when there "came in a moment" the crown of his work, the immortal lyric, Crossing the Bar. It is hardly less majestic and musical in the perfect Greek rendering by his brother-in-law, Mr Lushington. For once at least a poem has been "poured from the golden to the silver cup" w