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Genre/Form: | poetry Drama Poetry Annotations (Provenance) Poésie Théâtre |
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Additional Physical Format: | Online version: Tennyson, Alfred Tennyson, Baron, 1809-1892. Poetic and dramatic works of Alfred, lord Tennyson. Boston ; New York : Houghton Mifflin and Co., 1898 (OCoLC)579028463 |
Named Person: | Alfred Tennyson Tennyson, Baron; Alfred Tennyson Tennyson, Baron |
Document Type: | Book |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Alfred Tennyson Tennyson, Baron; W J Rolfe |
OCLC Number: | 363374 |
Notes: | Title vignette. |
Description: | xvii, 887 pages : portrait ; 21 cm. |
Contents: | Claribel -- Nothing will die -- All things will die -- Leonine elegiacs -- Supposed confessions of a second-rate sensitive mind -- The kraken -- Song : 'The winds, as at their hour of birth' -- Lilian -- Isabel -- Mariana -- To- -- Madeline -- Song : The owl -- Second song, to the same -- Recollections of the Arabian nights -- Ode to memory -- Song : 'A spirit haunts the year's last hours' -- 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 -- Adeline -- Margaret -- Rosalind -- Eleanore -- Kate -- 'My life is full of weary days' -- To J.M.K. -- 'Mine be the strength of spirit, full and free' -- Alexander -- Buonaparte -- Poland -- 'Caress'd or chidden by the slender hand' -- The form, the form alone is eloquent' -- 'Wan sculptor, weepest thou to take the cast' -- 'If I were loved, as I desire to be' -- The bridesmaid -- The lady of Shalott -- Mariana in the south -- The two voices -- The miller's daughter -- Fatima -- OEnone -- The sisters -- 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 -- The blackbird -- The death of the old year -- To J.S. -- On a mourner -- 'You ask me, why, tho' ill at ease' -- 'Of old sat freedom on the heights' -- 'Love thou thy land, with love far-brought' -- England and America in 1782 -- The goose -- The epic -- Morte d'arthur -- The gardener's daughter -- Dora -- Audley court -- Walking to the mail -- Edwin Morris -- Saint Simeon stylites -- The talking oak -- Love and duty -- The golden year -- Ulysses -- Tithonus -- Locksley hall -- Godiva -- The day-dream : Prologue ; The sleeping palace ; The sleeping beauty ; The arrival ; The revival ; The departure ; Moral ; L'envoi ; Epilogue -- Amphion -- Saint Agnes' eve -- Sir Galahad -- Edward Gray -- Will Waterproof's lyrical monologue -- Lady Clare -- The captain -- The Lord of Burleigh -- The voyage -- Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere -- A farewell -- The beggar maid -- The eagle -- 'Move eastward, happy earth' -- 'Come not, when I am dead' -- The letters -- The vision of sin -- To-, after reading a life and letters -- To E.L., on his travels in Greece -- 'Break, break, break' -- The poet's song -- The princess -- In memoriam A.H.H. -- Maud; a monodrama -- The brook -- The daisy -- To the rev. F.D. Maurice -- Will -- Ode on the death of the duke of Wellington -- The charge of the light brigade -- Enoch Arden -- Aylmer's field -- Sea dreams -- Ode sung at the opening of the international exhibition -- A welcome to Alexandra -- The grandmother -- Northern farmer; old style -- Northern farmer; new style -- In the valley of Cauteretz -- The flower -- Requiescat -- The sailor boy -- The islet -- A dedication -- Boadicea -- On translations of Homer -- Milton -- 'O you chorus of indolent reviewers' -- Specimen of a translation of the Iliad in blank verse -- The third of February, 1852 -- A welcome to her royal highness Marie Alexandrovna, Duchess of Edinburgh -- In the garden at Swainston -- The city child -- Minnie and Winnie -- The spiteful letter -- Literary squabbles -- The victim -- Wages -- The higher pantheism -- The voice and the peak -- 'Flower in the crannied wall' -- Lucretius -- The window : On the hill ; At the window ; Gone ; Winter ; Spring ; The letter ; No answer ; The Answer ; Ay ; When ; Marriage morning -- The lover's tale -- The golden supper -- Dedication -- The coming of Arthur -- The round table -- Gareth and Lynette -- The marriage of Geraint -- Geraint and Enid -- Balin and Balin -- Merlin and Vivien -- Lancelot and Elaine -- The holy grail -- Pelleas and Ettarre -- The last tournament -- Guinevere -- The passing of Arthur -- To the queen -- To Alfred Tennyson, my grandson -- The first quarrel -- Rizpah -- The northern cobbler -- The revenge -- The sisters -- The village wife -- In the children's hospital -- Dedicatory poem to the princess Alice -- The defence of Lucknow -- Sir John Oldcastle, Lord Cobham -- Columbus -- The voyage of Maeldune -- De Profundis : The two greetings ; The human cry -- Prefatory sonnet -- To the rev. W.H. Brookfield -- Montenegro -- To victor Hugo -- Battle of Brunanburh -- Achilles over the trench -- To princess Frederica on her marriage -- Sir John Franklin -- To Dante -- To E. Fitzgerald -- Tiresias -- The wreck -- Despair -- The ancient sage -- The flight -- To-morrow -- The spinster's sweet-arts -- The charge of the heavy brigade at Balaclava : Prologue : to General Hamley ; The charge ; Epilogue -- To Virgil -- The dead prophet -- Early spring -- Prefatory poem to my brother's sonnets -- 'Frater ave atque vale' -- Helen's tower -- Epitaph on Lord Stratford de Redcliffe -- Epitaph on General Gordon -- Epitaph on Caxton -- To the Duke of Argyll -- Hangs all round -- Freedom -- Poets and their bibliographies -- To H.R.H. Princess Beatrice -- Locksley Hall sixty years after -- The fleet -- Opening of the Indian and colonial exhibition by the queen -- To W.C. Macready -- To the Marquis of Dufferin and Ava -- On the jubilee of Queen Victoria -- To Professor Jebb -- Demeter and Persephone -- Owd Roa -- Vastness -- The ring -- Forlorn -- Happy -- To Ulysses -- To Mary Boyle -- The progress of spring -- Merlin and the gleam -- Romney's remorse -- Parnassus -- By an evolutionist -- Old age -- Far-far-away -- Politics -- Beautiful city -- The roses on the terrace -- The play -- On one who affected an effeminate manner -- To one who ran down the English -- The snowdrop -- The throstle -- The oak -- In memoriam W.G. Ward -- Queen Mary : a drama -- Harold : a drama : Show-day at Battle Abbey, 1876 ; Harold -- Becket -- The falcon -- The cup -- The promise of May -- Crossing the bar -- Selections from 'Poems by two brothers': Memory ; The exile's harp ; 'Why should we weep for those who die?' ; Remorse ; The dell of E- ; Antony to Cleopatra ; 'I wander in darkness and sorrow' ; The old sword ; 'We meet no more' ; Written by an exile of Bassorah ; The vale of bones ; 'Did not thy roseate lips out-vie ; Persia ; Egypt ; The druid's prophecies ; The expedition of Nadir Shah into Hindostan ; The maid of Savoy ; Midnight ; Scotch song ; Song : 'It is the solemn even-time' ; Friendship ; 'And ask ye why these sad tears stream?' ; On sublimity ; The deity ; Time : an ode ; God's denunciations against Pharaoh-Hophra, or Apries ; The grave of a suicide ; The walk at midnight ; Mithridrates presenting Berenice with the cup of poison ; The old chieftain ; The fall of Jerusalem ; Lamentation of the Peruvians ; 'The sun goes down in the dark blue main' ; On a dead enemy ; The duke of Alva's observation on kings ; 'Ah! yes, the lip may faintly smile' ; 'Thou camest to thy bower, my love, across the musky grove' ; The passions ; The high-priest to Alexander ; On the moon-light shining upon a friend's grave ; A contrast ; The dying Christian ; 'How gaily sinks the gorgeous sun within his golden bed' ; 'Oh! Ye wild winds, that roar and rave' ; Switzerland ; Babylon ; Love ; Song : 'To sit beside a chrystal spring' ; Exhortation to the Greeks ; King Charles's vision --Timbuctoo -- The 'how' and the 'why' -- The burial of love -- Song : 'I' the glooming light' -- Song : 'The lintwhite and the throstlecock' -- Song : 'Every day hath its night' -- Hero to Leander -- The mystic -- The grasshopper -- Love, pride, and forgetfulness -- Chorus -- Lost hope -- The tears of heaven -- Love and sorrow -- To a lady sleeping -- 'Could I outwear my present state of woe' -- 'Though night hath climbed her peak of highest noon' -- 'Shall the hag evil die with child of good' -- 'The pallid thunder-stricken sigh for gain' -- Love -- English war-song -- National song -- Dualisms -- The sea fairies -- 'O beauty, passing beauty! sweetest sweet!' -- The Hesperides -- Rosalind -- Song : 'who can say' -- Sonnet, written on hearing of the outbreak of the Polish insurrection -- O darling room -- To Christopher North -- On Cambridge University -- No more -- Anacreontics -- A fragment -- 'Me my own fate to lasting-sorrow doometh' -- 'Check every out-flash, every ruder sally' -- 'There are three things which fill my heart with sighs' -- The skipping-rope -- The new Timon and the poets -- Lines, contributed to 'The Manchester Athenaeum' -- Stanzas, contributed to 'The Keepsake' -- Britons, guard your own -- Additional verses to 'God save the Queen' -- The war -- The ringlet -- Lines : Long as the heart beats life within her breast -- 1865-1866 -- Stanza, contributed to the 'Shakespearean show-book' -- Compromise -- Experiment in Sapphic metre. |
Series Title: | Cambridge edition of the poets. |
Other Titles: | Works. Tennyson's poetical works |
Responsibility: | [edited by W.J. Rolfe]. |
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