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Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: 'Tho much is taken, much abides' Ulysses above all Review: This is a rich collection of the work of Tennyson, and those who care for his verse will derive great pleasure from it. For myself most of Tennyson's longer poems have been more skimmed and tasted by me than really chewed and digested. Tennyson lives as a poet to me primarily through one poem, 'Ulysses'. This poem to my mind perfectly embodies a certain heroic stance toward life. It does this in immortal lines. The poem tells the story of the great Ulysses returning home after having voyaged and become ' a part of all I have met' . He is now not the youth who set out in the beginning but an elderly veteran. He begins with , 'Though much is taken much abides' And so in mid-life or in late- life having come home he is not content to rest. But is an ' old man explorer' who sets out again to meet and make his destiny. ' Though much is taken much abides, and though we are not that strength, which in old days, moved earth and heaven, that which we are we are, one equal temper of heroic hearts, made weak by time and fate, but strong in will, to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.'
This kind of determination not only spoke to the Victorian world, and to Tennyson's own life- situation with its great losses and difficulties, but I believe will speak to mankind for so long as we are human.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: "To Strive, To Seek, To Find, and Not to Yield Review: This is an eminently readable collection of Tennyson's most memorable poems. Both the price and the content are of great value to today's readers. Our present times reflect stress and change which parrallels Tennyson's world. The poems are timeless and language is no barrier for a new millenium reader of this valient poet. For those looking for guidlines to courage and consistency, I recommend that you read and enjoy this book. Your gain will be ten-fold the price.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: "His broad clear brow in sunlight glow'd..." Review: This is an excellent collection of Tennyson's poems, very representative, very inclusive. In order to make room for so many poems with full texts, the editor has chosen not to include an Introduction. This, of course, for the non-Tennyson reader or person wishing to know more about him presents something of an obstacle. However, a bit of rambling to one's own library, or a municipal one, can solve that. There is included a Chronology of important dates and events concerning Tennyson's life. From this, a few of the important facts seem to be: 1809--born at Somersby, fourth son of Revd George Clayton Tennyson, Rector of Somersby; 1816-1820--pupil at Louth Grammar School, subsequently educated at home by his father; 1827-- publishes _Poems by Two Brothers_ with his brother Charles, also enters Trinity College, Cambridge University; 1829--meets Arthur Henry Hallam, also a student at Trinity, who was to become Tennyson's close friend and the fiance of Tennyson's sister Emily, also wins the Chancellor's Gold Medal with his prize poem "Timbuctoo", and becomes a member of the "Apostles," a Cambridge debating society; 1830--publication of _Poems, Chiefly Lyrical_; 1831--death of Tennyson's father, he leaves Cambridge without a degree; 1833 (September) death of Hallam, his close friend, from a cerebral hemorrhage while on holiday in Vienna; 1840--beginning of almost a decade of depression and ill health for Tennyson; 1850--marries Emily Sellwood, appointed Poet Laureate of England; 1852--birth of first son whom he names "Hallam"; 1883--accepts offer of title of Baron, taking his seat in the House of Lords in March 1884; 1892--dies on 6 October. The poems in this anthology come from the major publishings of Tennyson's poems. The first two: "Timbuctoo" was published in the _Cambridge Chronicle and Journal_ (1829) --and "The Idealist" was not published during Tennyson's lifetime [this informationcomes from the very good notes supplied by the Editor Aidan Day at the back of the volume]. The poems included in this volume which the scholar or general reader might wish to know are here collected in one edition [full texts], along with many more than these mentioned, are: The Lady of Shalott; Oenone; The Palace of Art; The Hesperides; The Lotos-Eaters; Morte d'Arthur; Ulysses; Locksley Hall; short poems from _The Princess_; IN MEMORIAM, A.H.H. (1850); MAUD (1855); Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington; The Charge of the Light Brigade; Tithonous; Lucretius; To E. FitzGerald; Tiresias; The Ancient Sage; Locksley Hall Sixty Years After (1886); Demeter and Persephone; Crossing the Bar. These poems are presented in chronological order in the text, and the very good Table of Contents in the front of the book tells the poetry collection and its date from which the poems come. Tennyson is one of those interesting poets that take a bit of time (at least for me) to get used to -- to want to read, to really listen to. Having had the experience of being required to memorize some of Tennyson for my early academic training in school at least got me acquainted with the more accessible, but somewhat less deep poems. But it has taken several years, much experience, and depressed grief over the loss of a beloved, to bring me into synch with the deeper poetry...or at least, being able to hear it with deeper understanding, deeper reading. From these poems it is hard to pick "favorites," and that almost seems too trite a word. Maybe "meaningful" would be more appropriate as a term. The two I would select out would be "The Palace of Art" (1832; rev. 1842) and IN MEMORIAM, A.H.H. (1833), on the death of his dear, beloved friend Arthur Hallam. From "The Palace of Art," these lines resonate: * * * * * * * * * And with choice paintings of wise men I hung The royal dais round. For there was Milton like a seraph strong, Beside him Shakespeare bland and mild; And there the world-worn Dante grasp'd his song, And somewhat grimly smiled. And there the Ionian father of the rest; A million wrinkles carved his skin; A hundred winters snow'd upon his breast, From cheek and throat and chin. ...... And thro' the topmost Oriels' coloured flame Two godlike faces gazed below; Plato the wise, and large-brow'd Verulam, The first of those who know. -- Arthur Lord Tennyson. * * * * * * * *
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: "His broad clear brow in sunlight glow'd..." Review: This is an excellent collection of Tennyson's poems, very representative, very inclusive. In order to make room for so many poems with full texts, the editor has chosen not to include an Introduction. This, of course, for the non-Tennyson reader or person wishing to know more about him presents something of an obstacle. However, a bit of rambling to one's own library, or a municipal one, can solve that. There is included a Chronology of important dates and events concerning Tennyson's life. From this, a few of the important facts seem to be: 1809--born at Somersby, fourth son of Revd George Clayton Tennyson, Rector of Somersby; 1816-1820--pupil at Louth Grammar School, subsequently educated at home by his father; 1827-- publishes _Poems by Two Brothers_ with his brother Charles, also enters Trinity College, Cambridge University; 1829--meets Arthur Henry Hallam, also a student at Trinity, who was to become Tennyson's close friend and the fiance of Tennyson's sister Emily, also wins the Chancellor's Gold Medal with his prize poem "Timbuctoo", and becomes a member of the "Apostles," a Cambridge debating society; 1830--publication of _Poems, Chiefly Lyrical_; 1831--death of Tennyson's father, he leaves Cambridge without a degree; 1833 (September) death of Hallam, his close friend, from a cerebral hemorrhage while on holiday in Vienna; 1840--beginning of almost a decade of depression and ill health for Tennyson; 1850--marries Emily Sellwood, appointed Poet Laureate of England; 1852--birth of first son whom he names "Hallam"; 1883--accepts offer of title of Baron, taking his seat in the House of Lords in March 1884; 1892--dies on 6 October. The poems in this anthology come from the major publishings of Tennyson's poems. The first two: "Timbuctoo" was published in the _Cambridge Chronicle and Journal_ (1829) --and "The Idealist" was not published during Tennyson's lifetime [this information comes from the very good notes supplied by the Editor Aidan Day at the back of the volume]. The poems included in this volume which the scholar or general reader might wish to know are here collected in one edition [full texts], along with many more than these mentioned, are: The Lady of Shalott; Oenone; The Palace of Art; The Hesperides; The Lotos-Eaters; Morte d'Arthur; Ulysses; Locksley Hall; short poems from _The Princess_; IN MEMORIAM, A.H.H. (1850); MAUD (1855); Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington; The Charge of the Light Brigade; Tithonous; Lucretius; To E. FitzGerald; Tiresias; The Ancient Sage; Locksley Hall Sixty Years After (1886); Demeter and Persephone; Crossing the Bar. These poems are presented in chronological order in the text, and the very good Table of Contents in the front of the book tells the poetry collection and its date from which the poems come. Tennyson is one of those interesting poets that take a bit of time (at least for me) to get used to -- to want to read, to really listen to. Having had the experience of being required to memorize some of Tennyson for my early academic training in school at least got me acquainted with the more accessible, but somewhat less deep poems. But it has taken several years, much experience, and depressed grief over the loss of a beloved, to bring me into synch with the deeper poetry...or at least, being able to hear it with deeper understanding, deeper reading. From these poems it is hard to pick "favorites," and that almost seems too trite a word. Maybe "meaningful" would be more appropriate as a term. The two I would select out would be "The Palace of Art" (1832; rev. 1842) and IN MEMORIAM, A.H.H. (1833), on the death of his dear, beloved friend Arthur Hallam. From "The Palace of Art," these lines resonate: * * * * * * * * * And with choice paintings of wise men I hung The royal dais round. For there was Milton like a seraph strong, Beside him Shakespeare bland and mild; And there the world-worn Dante grasp'd his song, And somewhat grimly smiled. And there the Ionian father of the rest; A million wrinkles carved his skin; A hundred winters snow'd upon his breast, From cheek and throat and chin. ...... And thro' the topmost Oriels' coloured flame Two godlike faces gazed below; Plato the wise, and large-brow'd Verulam, The first of those who know. -- Arthur Lord Tennyson. * * * * * * * *
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: The great British poet laureate of the Victorian age Review: This little book is a good and inexpensive introduction to Tennyson, who was every Victorian lady's favorite. From a purely technical level, he was absolutely ingenious, perhaps the best poet of Victorian times. His poems were also easy to remember and recite aloud. For example, "The Lady of Shalott." Give this poem a try and you'll see what I mean. David Rehak author of "Poems From My Bleeding Heart"
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