Light, so low upon earth,
You send a flash to the sun.
Here is the golden close of love,
All my wooing is done.
Oh, the woods and the meadows,
Woods where we hid from the wet,
Stiles where we stay’d to be kind,
Meadows in which we met!
Light, so low in the vale
You flash and lighten afar,
For this is the golden morning of
love,
And you are his morning star.
Flash, I am coming, I come,
By meadow and stile and wood,
Oh, lighten into my eyes and heart,
Into my heart and my blood!
Heart, are you great enough
For a love that never tires?
O heart, are you great enough for love?
I have heard of thorns and briers,
Over the meadow and stiles,
Over the world to the end of it
Flash for a million miles.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Alfred Tennyson (1809-1892), English poet often regarded as the chief representative
of the Victorian age in poetry. Tennyson succeeded Wordsworth as Poet Laureate
in 1850.
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
was born on August 5, 1809 in Somersby, Lincolnshire. His father, George
Clayton Tennyson, a clergyman and rector, suffered from depression and was
notoriously absentminded. Alfred began to write poetry at an early age in the
style of Lord Byron. After spending four unhappy years in school he was tutored
at home. Tennyson then studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he joined
the literary club 'The Apostles' and met Arthur Hallam, who became his closest
friend. Tennyson published Poems,
Chiefly Lyrical, in 1830, which included the popular
"Mariana".
He married Emily Sellwood, whom he had met in 1836. The couple settled in Farringford, a house in
Freshwater on the Isle of Wight in 1853. From there the family moved in 1869 to
Aldworth, Surrey. During these later years he produced some of his best poems.
Among Tennyson's major poetic achievements is the elegy
mourning the death of his friend Arthur Hallam, "In Memoriam" (1850).
The patriotic poem "Charge of the Light Brigade", published in Maud
(1855), is one of Tennyson's best known works, although at first
"Maud" was found obscure or morbid by critics ranging from George
Eliot to Gladstone. Enoch Arden (1864) was based on a true story of a sailor
thought drowned at sea who returned home after several years to find that his
wife had remarried. Idylls Of The King
(1859-1885) dealt with the Arthurian theme.
In the 1870s Tennyson wrote several plays, among them the
poetic dramas Queen Mary (1875)
and Harold (1876). In 1884 he
was created a baron.
Tennyson died at Aldwort on October 6, 1892 and was buried
in the Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey.
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