Themes of Solitude, Melancholy and Sorrow in the Poetry of Tennyson

Elegiac Note in Tennyson’s Verse: W.H. Auden, commenting on Tennyson, said: “There was little about melancholia that he (Tennyson) did not know; there was little else that he did.” While the second part of this comment is an unkind cut, the first part emphasizes an essential truth about the poetry of Tennyson. T.S. Eliot called … Read more

Tennyson’s Doubts about God and His Faith in Knowledge

Tennyson’s Scepticism: Tennyson represents’ the Victorian Age in the same way as Pope represents the early 18th century. The Victorian Age was marked throughout by the spirit of enquiry and criticism, by scepticism and religious uncertainty, by spiritual struggle and unrest and by the analytical and critical habit of mind. The popularity of Darwin’s theory … Read more

Tennyson’s Being Endowed with Great Art of Pictorial Paintings

A Gifted Poet with Unrivalled Powers: Tennyson was a great pictorial artist. He was gifted with unrivalled powers of picturing a scene, a landscape, a person in words marked with clarity and vividness. This art of pictorial painting was learnt by the poet quite early in his life by keeping Keats’s pictorial paintings as his … Read more

Tennyson’s Poem Break, Break, Break || Summary and Critical Appreciation

Text of the Poem: Break, break, break, On thy cold gray stones, O Sea! And I would that my tongue could utter The thoughts that arise in me. O well for the fisherman’s boy, That he shouts with his sister at play! O well for the sailor’s lad, That he sings in his boat on the bay! And the stately ships go on To … Read more

Tennyson’s Idealizing Domestic Love in His Poetry

Tennyson’s Originality and Uniqueness:  Love has always been the theme of poetry; love has inspired some of the greatest poetry of the world. In the English language, Shakespeare, Donne, Shelley, Byron, Browning, etc., are some of the greatest of love-poets. Tennyson is also a great love-poet, and his treatment of love is unique in many … Read more

Alfred Lord Tennyson As An Unrivalled Lyrical Genius of His Age

Tennyson, An Unrivalled Lyrical Poet: Tennyson is the greatest lyrical poet between Shelley and Swinburne. He is an unrivalled lyrical genius of his age. He was endowed with all those qualities which made him the supreme lyric poet of his country. Instead of remaining a singer voicing forth the subjective feelings that welled in his … Read more

Decline in Tennyson’s Popularity and His Victorian Compromise

Introduction: In his own times Tennyson was built up into a legend. His popularity amounted almost to hero-worship. He was surrounded by a halo of adoration. As Long observes, “For full half century, he was the voice of England, loved and honoured as a man and a poet, not simply by a few discerning critics, … Read more

Thomas Gray As A Great Transitional, Romantic, Classical Poet of 18th Century

Introduction: Thomas Gray is one of the most popular poets in English. He belongs to the age of transition, 18th century is known for its neo- classicism. Pope was the most representative poet of the age. With, the publication of Thomson’s ‘Seasons’ there appeared a phase of change in form of rising romanticism. It changed … Read more

William Wordsworth’s Mysticism and romanticism

Introduction: Wordsworth was one of the leaders and protagonists of English Romantic Movement. Coleridge and Wordsworth were the two great pioneer leaders who made the transition from classicism to romanticism in poetry during 19th century. The two poets set themselves to two opposite tasks of romanticism. Wordsworth took upon himself to make natural things look … Read more